UK Wants Huge Expansion In Offshore Wind Power 264
OriginalArlen writes "The UK government has announced an ambitious plan to expand the existing offshore wind turbine farms, which are already extensive, to an estimated 7,000 units — two per mile of coastline — enough to generate 20% of the UK's power needs by 2020. The newly green-friendly Conservative opposition party is also backing the scheme. Wonder what they'll make of it in Oregon..."
Why not make some more nuclear plants? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Spain is third in the world, ahead of France (Score:2)
Electricity export from France (Score:5, Insightful)
In case you're not familiar with power sources, for baseload power, you're generally going to be using hydro, nuclear, or coal. They're sources whose fuel is cheap and whose plants lend themselves to larger outputs. To cover infrequent peaks of demand, one frequently maintains reserve capacity in the form of gas turbines or, less common and more expensively, oil or gas-fired power plants. Reserve capacity has a low purchase price (or is leftover from decades with more favorable fuel prices, in the case of oil and gas-fired plants) and a high operating cost
Italy--in goddamn 2007--maintains oil-fired baseload capacity. That's right, the stuff an American power company won't touch unless a market's gas lines happened to be cut on the same day their whirly gigs won't start up. Just like the rest of the West did up until the first Oil Crisis in the 1970's.
So, while France's impressive system for licensing and standardizing plants, along with their active R&D in the industry, might be laudable, that surplus is there to profit from flaws in their neighbors' own energy policies.
European hell... (Score:4, Funny)
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Sounds pukka!
Re:Electricity export from France (Score:5, Funny)
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Public mood in England is shifting away from Nuclear power following various leaks http://archive.thisisthenortheast.co.uk/2004/6/10/49327.html/ [thisisthenortheast.co.uk] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sellafield#2005_Thorp_plant_leak/ [wikipedia.org]
Not to mention uranium is a finite source, uses lots of energy to mine and refine, there's no way to deal with the waste long term and plants can be dangerous.
So why not go with the safer, long term alternative which is wind power?
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Wind power aaaaaand...?
Seriously, you need an "and" in there. The wind doesn't blow reliably all the time, no matter how hard Windy Miller whistles.
So. Wind power and...?
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Wind/Solar and "Base Load" (Score:5, Insightful)
An electrical energy system has two values that are critical in preserving the integrity of the system.
1) "Base load" - the minimum amount of load the system can expect at any time. In short, there's *always* going to be this much or more energy produced at any given time. If you overproduce Base load you have rising voltages in the system and potentially cause problems. Though, this is rarely a problem - if there was too much capacity at any time, they could offset the phase of a generator or two, causing one system to effectively cancel out the other, reducing system voltage.
2) "Max load" - the maximum amount of load the system could generate at any time. If your usage exceeds max load, you have rolling brownouts or even blackouts.
Usually, the "Base load" is handled by slower-moving-but cheap power plants. A coal-fired plant can take an hour or more to change its output significantly, but it can produce electricity 24x7 at the cheapest possible cost. Thus it's a good candidate for "Base Load". But whatever solution is applied to base load, it must be very, very dependable.
However, the difference between Base load and Max load can be quite variable, changing significantly in mere minutes. This "Variable load" must be met in order to prevent voltage spikes and/or brownouts, and to handle this, you need power plants that can vary their output quickly, and on demand.
Notice that neither Wind or Solar energy can actually act as either Base or Variable loads. Yes, they add energy to the sytem, but they can't be considered "Base load" since their output varies. And they can't really be considered "Variable load" because their output varies with their wind-energy input, NOT because their output varies upon demand.
Thus, Wind/Solar can't really be used as EITHER base or "Variable" load. ALL of the output of either Solar or Wind energy must be matched by other variable load sources, so that when the wind isn't blowing and/or the sun not shining, the system as a whole can preserve its integrity. And this is the part that nobody discusses.
YES, you can get energy from the wind, or from solar panels. But it isn't reliable, so can't be used for "Base load", but it also isn't available "on demand" so it isn't useful for "Variable load".
Which brings me to my point: what if they used the wind energy to compress air that's otherwise stored on the ocean floor? All that nice, heavy water would avoid the need for high-pressure tanks, simply pushing the water out of the way would provide significant amounts of energy. And it would be useful for either base or variable loads, since the compressed air could be used to power generators on demand. Oh, and piping compressed air is a fairly lossless ordeal.
Why not?
Why not?
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Coal is not that cheap, and pollutes more than anything else
We have a few machines like Dinorwig [ic.ac.uk] which feed peak demand from baseload generation.
We have a lot of windmills that are politically correct, but sited where they disfigure the environment, and generate no electicity at all, as far as I can see.
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Thus, Wind/Solar can't really be used as EITHER base or "Variable" load. ALL of the output of either Solar or Wind energy must be matched by other variable load sources, so that when the wind isn't blowing and/or the sun not shining, the system as a whole can preserve its integrity. And this is the part that nobody discusses.
Nobody discusses? It is discussed pretty much every time wind and solar is brought up :) Still, an excellent post, but there is a couple of factors you have overlooked:
One is weather forecasts. It is perfectly reasonable to predict the wind and solar power output for the next few hours. Thus, if you get a period where significant parts of UK enjoys no wind and fog, UK would have hours notice to start up those coal power plants, or bring on line an extra nuclear reactor or two. This is quite unlike the p
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First effect of too large production in a system would not be a rise in voltage, but rise in frequency - both effects will happen, but frequency rise will be more significant. Voltage change is usually an effect of inadequate reactive power generation.
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No it's not. I don't speak about AC circuits, I speak about power/energy balance. I just want to know how you can explain energy balance if we have two power plants that produce more power than user consumes. I don't understand how phase shifting will in long run prevent frequency and voltage to increase (which will lead t
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We weren't allowed to take any pictures, and googling generally yields results on utility-grade units which are a
Solar CAN BE base load [wind too with help!] (Score:4, Interesting)
This isn't quite accurate. In many industrialized parts of the world, the annual peak load is during sunny periods. Think: Arizona. Why is the peak load during sunny periods? Air conditioning. When do solar cells produce the most electricity? During sunny periods. Correlation can be used to allow intermittent power to be considered "base". Is it possible that there'd be a peak on a cloudy day in Arizona, or at night? I guess. It's also possible that all the coal power plants will have to come down for emergency service at the same time.
Correlation can also be used to allow wind to be base load, under at least two scenarios: In the first, if you had two wind turbines spread geographically in such a way that they were highly negatively correlated -- that is, if one was spinning, the other wasn't -- then you could count one of the two as base load, since one of the two will always spin. You won't be able to get two turbines with a coefficient of -1.0, but you might be able to find a series of turbines in which they were always generating some power, and you could count that as base. The other way to count wind turbines as base is to use a second source of power [say, natural gas, wood chips, landfill gas with a storage tank, etc] and force them to have a correlation of -1.0 by varying the output of the second source of power perfectly negatively with the wind, thereby guaranteeing a minimum output between the two systems.
Are any of these methods applicable just anywhere? Nope. But, there's plenty of room for solar installations in the Southwest US to count as base [and as an added bonus they're distributed, so massive failure is far less likely], and some wind can be used as base load anywhere if there's enough negative correlation in wind or using a second type of power plant.
All of this ignores the very real opportunity to use technology to shift peak. Give people instant feedback on the supply-demand curves [ie change price] and watch as they shift their usage off peak -- thinks like running the dishwasher or clothes washer/dryer will start happening later in the evening, helping to smooth the peak thereby making intermittent power sources like wind and solar less difficult to incorporate into the supply grid.
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It's a big IF though.
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Your compressed air system would be one such project. The mainstream option for a long while has been hydroelectric (use surplus electricity to pump water into a reservoir; when demand is high, use that water to run a turbine).
And there's the option of trying to flatten demand via economics (cheaper electricity at night), which has some success.
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The number of turbines proposed averages out at one turbine for every two miles of coastline (according to the BBC news).
Once middle England realises thier favorate beach/bird sanctuary/sea view is going to host a dozen turbines the "Not In My Back Yard" syndrome will kick in fast, then the UK government will say "Oh then we will have to build some nukes, heres a plan I made earlier".
Most UK politicians are PR persons, lawyers or phone clean
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This is a pity because most of the current nuclear power plants will be decomissioned in the next 10 years along with quite a few of the coal fired ones leaving us with a large gap between the amount of e
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What is interesting here is that it is actually not Britain being afraid of the Gulf going tits up, it is afraid of Russia. Even with the new Norwegian pipeline that came online last year the net North sea gas production is forecast to continue decreasing. As a result the UK which has moved most of its electricity production to gas as has 90% of households using gas will have to start buying
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Makes you proud to be British!
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That British Coal stopped its plans to eviscerate the mining industry?
That people doing a difficult and dangerous job should be paid accordingly?
The miner's strike was the culmination of a planned attack by Thatcher on the British people, fed by her determination to squander the North Sea oil and gas dividend as quickly as possible in order to enrich Denis's friends in the oil industry.
Coupled with the disastrous notion of privatisation and the destruction of most of our manufactur
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They want us to use less energy. (Score:2)
It's a bit dickish, but so are the religionists when they try to get their wacky fa
Tidal is different from wind (Score:4, Informative)
The situation in Oregon called for the implementation of buoy-like devices to harness wave motion into power. Great Britain is talking about placing windmills offshore. The power generation and science in general is different. The politics of it may be the same though. I'm not qualified to speak about Brit NIMBY's (or I guess NOMSL-not on my shore line), Brit fisherman, or Brit energy lobbyists, as I am an American. I imagine there would be some resistance here, but I not familiar with the situation. On the other hand, wind is a proven tech so who knows. It really just comes down to how powerful the lobbying against this is, as it looks technically feasible and sufficiently beneficial.
They are, but perhaps they can combine (Score:4, Interesting)
NIMBYs are hugely powerful in the UK (Score:5, Interesting)
The opposition in the UK will come, not from locals, but weekending Londoners and expat American actors who will object to everything that spoils their view of the rest of the UK as their weekend playground. They will oppose the substations where power comes on shore (they've already done that in the Thames estuary), and, because they are lousy sailors, they will oppose anything that they might bump into while cruising drunk.
And they will demand first access to food and power when the crunch comes. Welcome to a country of 60 million people entirely controlled by the inhabitants of one Southern city.
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There will be a large number of uber-conservatives who think that windmills will destroy the environment
(I may be confusing US vs. UK terminology of conservatives. If so... please correct me and/or disregard my babbling)
It doesn't take an "uber-conservatives" to NIMBY a project to death. Ted Kennedy has been fighting a wind turbine project in Nantucket Sound for a couple of years. I understand people wanting to keep their property values high and their view of the land pristine but there's no point in saying it's a conservative vs liberal thing. People come out to block everything... a new bridge, removing
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For what it's worth, pretty much everyone reported in the UK press seems to like this idea. All the major political parties are behind it. The relevant parts of the energy industry are behind it, of course. But the environmental lobby are behind it, too, and there have been very few dissenting voices generally.
Basically, we have a lot of untapped, renewable resources in this area, and doing it off-shore both increases the yields and reduces the eyesore and wastage of land (a relatively scarce resource in
Kennedy Comment (Score:3, Insightful)
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Mmm breezy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mmm breezy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mmm breezy (Score:4, Funny)
Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work (Score:3, Insightful)
(*) It will be fought by entrenched fishing interests
(FWIW it is my firm belief that this phrase should become the next Slashdot meme.)
Re:Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't w (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm just intrigued by the idea that whilst providing power, they may also provide protection to allow fish stocks to recover in the waters around them where trawlers will struggle to fish.
Of course, I hear these things are quite bad for birds instead however so it's still not entirely harmless I guess.
Yawn (Score:2)
Three fifths of bugger all I'd expect.
In the long run a large area which is never fished will probably have a rather positive effect on fish "restocking" levels.
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Good news! (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Phase out coal and fossil thermal plant. Fossil fuel will be reserved for things like airplanes or other moving equipment because of its high energy density (13 KWh/kg for gasoline compared to 0.14 KWh/kg for flywheels and 0.04 KWh/kg for batteries). It will slowly become obvious that it is silly to use fossil fuel for stationary equipment like power plants.
2) Use existing hydro infrastructure
3) Use wind
4) Use solar
5) Use nuclear
6) Etc..
In short, let's not put all our eggs in the same basket. This way if one way to get energy fails, we still have alternatives. Let's not pretend we are infallible and that we will get it right the first time with a single approach.
I have problems with a recent article on
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0) Use low-consumption electric appliances, enhance energy efficiency in every aspect of modern life and industrial development.
The rise of energy prices will probably drive us towards that trend anyway.
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You must be new here
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Anyway slashdotters don't put all their eggs in the same basket and I find there is a lot of "diversity" here:
Here is an example:
1) Ubuntu
2) Fedora
3) Debian
4) Slackware
5) Red-Hat
6) Suze
7) etc.
Do you see the diversity now ?
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Story update (Score:5, Informative)
Maintenance requirements? (Score:5, Interesting)
--
Educational microcontroller kits for the digital generation. [nerdkits.com]
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Granted it's only 30 turbines.
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Siemens Wind Power is the only producer of offshore parks as far as I know and have not experienced any major problems. Several parks are planned in the UK at Siemens are putting up the so called Greater Gabbard wind farm with arounrd 140 windmills.
Re:Maintenance requirements? (Score:4, Interesting)
That's 150 trips per day.
For 80 turbines.
So each turbine had to be serviced twice every day for 1.5 years, and each one of these involved a helicopter trip.
Are you sure about this?
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Numbers (Score:3, Interesting)
Estimated UK Demand 2020 = 381 TWh
Increase in demand = 23 TWh
Vesta V80 2MW wind turbine will make about 0.006666666 TWh in a year. V80's are used at North Hoyle Offshore Wind Farm.
3451 Vesta V80 will be required to meet the increase in demand.
This does not cover the loss of some coal-fired power stations after 2015.
Currently, there are 155 wind farm projects in the UK, with 1,900 turbines making around 6.4 TWh. The average makes around
57151 Vesta V80 would be required to make the 381 TWh in 2020. Over 7 wind turbines each mile of coastline.
All errors above were possibly intentional.
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Overall, cost of wind power vs other power sources vary a lot depending on who's talking about it and that's if they're in the same country.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4631737.stm [bbc.co.uk]
Here's some nuclea
stop this nonsense (Score:2, Insightful)
Power stransmission? (Score:2)
Ah ah ah ah!
NOT enough to generate 20% of the UK's power need (Score:3, Informative)
Correction to summary (Score:2, Interesting)
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The British are cigarettes? Seriously, old boy, I'm from MISSOURI [wikipedia.org] , and I know that slang means different things across the pond. If you don't catch up with the times, people are going to think you're one of those extremely unintelligent trolls. Oh, the shaminess of it all.
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Re:This has to have some long term effect... (Score:4, Interesting)
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"in western nations, people actually consume more energy than the solar flux of their entire country"? I've seen estimates from several hundred to something over 1000 W/m2 solar flux for the US. The area of the United State
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You DO realise English comes from England right?
So technically, you're the one saying it wrong.
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widely perhaps rp is the 'official' way of speaking
The only person I can think of who speaks like this is Brian Sewel http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3G618-hxgA [youtube.com]
Although you might prefer this interpretation http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bauz34toJ1g [youtube.com]
and here he is on one of the top uk tv programs
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=sc2jW2dp1g8 [youtube.com]
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It probably is to some people [videosift.com].
Re:Oh great (Score:4, Insightful)
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It was actually the Saxons who had the greatest influence on Old English rather than the Vikings, although there are some words and constructs in modern English that came from Old Norse.
"So English came from...Germany....sort of."
This is correct in that Saxons came from what is now called Germany, but the Vikings didn't (they were Nordics).
"Welsh, Irish and other Celtic languages are more English (as in from Engl
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Actually, no. (Score:5, Informative)
Newer wind turbine systems are larger, slower, better-designed, and more care is usually given to layout of a wind farm so that, while SOME birds are occasionally killed, the numbers are greatly reduced.
Do some Google searches for "altamont pass" and "wind turbines kill birds".
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Isn't this good for bird evolution? (Score:3, Funny)
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If it does (Score:3, Funny)
No explosion risk (Score:2)
I would guess that this might be the solution for the farms in the north sea. Send it ashore in DC form and then turn it into AC and synchronize it with the Grid onshore. Sort of much like the existing gas(natural not petroleum) transmission networks.
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Properly done, the work well together and last for years.
"Finally, in 1951, the Bonneville Power Administration laid a submarine power cable from Anacortes to the San Juan Islands and Lime Kiln Lighthouse was converted to electricity. "
http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm [historylink.org]
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That's silly thinking, I voted green last time. Not because I wanted to see them run the country but because I wanted them to have more seats in government to voice their opinion.
People think it's "throwing your vote away" but it's better to vote for a small party that wants to make a change then a one of the