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Earth Power United Kingdom Science

World's Largest Offshore Wind Farm Opens Off Northwest England (reuters.com) 175

The world's largest offshore wind farm has opened off the northwest coast of England. "The wind farm has a capacity of 659 megawatts (MW), enough to power almost 600,000 homes, and overtakes the London Array off England's east cost which has a capacity of 630 MW," reports Reuters. From the report: The Walney Extension (as it is called) is made up of 87 turbines built by Siemens Gamesa and MHI Vestas, and covers 145 square kilometers (55 square miles), which is equivalent to around 20,000 football pitches. The 40 eight-megawatt MHI Vestas turbines being used stand 195 meters (213 yards) tall and are the largest wind turbines in operation globally. Britain is the world's largest offshore wind market, hosting 36 percent of globally installed offshore wind capacity, data from the Global Wind Energy Council showed. Walney Extension was among the first renewable projects to secure a so-called contract for difference (CFD) subsidy from the British government in 2014. The contract guarantees it a minimum price for electricity of 150 pounds ($195) per megawatt hour (MWh) for 15 years. You can view some drone footage of the offshore windfarm via Orsted.
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World's Largest Offshore Wind Farm Opens Off Northwest England

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  • by sidetrack ( 4550 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:37AM (#57267948) Homepage
    See also https://www.electricitymap.org... [electricitymap.org] for realtime CO2 intensity of electricity production across a big chunk of the world... e.g. right now (morning peak), the UK's running on 28% gas, 24% nuclear, 19% wind, 8% coal, 4% solar.
    • Oh yeah, should have said - it's GPLv3 code is here - https://github.com/tmrowco/ele... [github.com]
    • by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:51AM (#57267976) Homepage

      Here is a real time G.B. National Grid Status [templar.co.uk], shows that wind is 15% (as I type).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        This should give wind a major boost in the UK. Hopefully the first of many.

      • I often visit Gridwatch and it really demonstrates the volatility of wind energy. I've seen it as high as 35% of total generation and a big fat 0% during a cold and still night; which ironically is when you need that energy the most.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Offshore wind is a lot more stable, one of the main advantages of it in fact.

        • I've seen it as high as 35% of total generation and a big fat 0% during a cold and still night; which ironically is when you need that energy the most.

          Don't worry, global warming has made it so that England needs the energy the most during the day, so they can run AC.

        • during a cold and still night; which ironically is when you need that energy the most.

          No, it's not. There is a reason that there are electricity tariffs such as "Economy 7", which provides cheaper electricity at night.

    • Nice map, that. Sad to see my country doing the worst of pretty much all western European countries, though it's been known for a while that we're nowhere near our goals for renewable energy. The good news is that in a few years we'll complete 2 new wind parks in the North Sea, each with about 1400MW capacity. But by the time they come online they won't be the largest anymore either. Offshore wind is taking off in a big way everywhere.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Wow, that map is amazing.

    • by Gonoff ( 88518 )

      e.g. right now (morning peak), the UK's running on 28% gas, 24% nuclear, 19% wind, 8% coal, 4% solar.

      The part of the UK I come from produces 125% of its electrical needs from wind. Years ago, I came across people who told me that I should be angry at the wind turbines because they are ugly, cause interference and kill lots of birds.

      They aren't, they don't and they don't so nobody got angry but it is nice to know that even a small, underfunded, area like Orkney can be a net exporter. If Elon Musk wants to come up, he can install some of his batteries - as long as he doesn't call anybody nasty things...

    • Thanks; very interesting - shows that the only two "green" countries in Europe are:

      1. Norway (the place was designed by God for hydro, it would appear), and
      2. France, which is pretty-much all nuke.

      So, if you're not Norway....

      • by stooo ( 2202012 )

        >> "green" countries ... 2. France, which is pretty-much all nuke.
        That's not true.
        This map is real time "as of now", and in average over a year it's muuuuuuch much worse, and very different.

        Basically France exports a lot of nuke electricity, esp. to Germany in the summer, but imports much more coal based electricity in the winter from Germany. This is due to the bad use of electric heating in France.

        • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

          Not really, Some electricity exported from France may flow through Germany. But Germany is actually a net exporter of electricity all year round. Yes, France has to import in the winter and also sometimes in summer if it gets so hot hat the nuclear plants have to be down regulated to avoid over heating of rivers. Also sometimes a lot of plants are down for some reason.

    • Hovering over countries (and US states) at random, I see that the UK is (at 9:45AM Eastern, US):

      63% low carbon
      40% renewable

      Good for them! Uh... now I'm wondering what those numbers actually mean.

      Since the percentages add to 103%, I assume they are measuring different things. Then, 63% of *what* is low carbon, and 40% of *what* is renewable?

      Poring through the FAQ for explanation is not viewer friendly, they're not doing the public a favor. And for most cases, when the percentages add to *less than* 100% who

      • by sidetrack ( 4550 )
        Renewable is a subset of low carbon. Low carbon will also include e.g. Nuclear (which is non-renewable because the fuel can only be used once).

        lowcarbon - renewable = nuclear

        low-carbon could also include e.g. gas with carbon sequestration, but this doesn't really exist on the grid (yet), apart from maybe one or two small demo plants.
      • You are missing imports and exports.

  • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:39AM (#57268062) Journal

    So why are we paying so much? Denmark are paying half the amount for offshore electricity per MWh. This govt is useless with money.

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      It's a subsidy. Just couched in a form that forces inflation and fucks up old people trying to stay warm in winter.

    • Indeed. People have been losing their shit over the £93/MWH strike price for Hinkley Point C so why aren't people outraged about this?

    • So why are we paying so much?

      Hmm, about 60% of the income for this windfarm is government price supports for the next 15 years...

      Not sure why it needs price supports, if, as is frequently stated here, it's one of the most economical forms of energy, and far cheaper then coal or nuclear....

      • Offshore wind is incredibly expensive. You're thinking of onshore wind which comes in at 1/3rd of the cost.
        That said offshore wind has some benefits that onshore doesn't: Predictability, strength, and it doesn't take up land. However offshore wind pretty much loses on a cost basis quite spectacularly.

        • On shore wind has the same predictability as off shore wind.
          It only is usually not as strong and not as steady.

          • On shore wind has the same predictability as off shore wind.
            It only is usually not as strong and not as steady.

            Yes true. Thanks I used the wrong words. Steady is a much better way to describe it.

            • Well,
              there are specialized companies that craft and sell localized wind prognosis data.
              That is used to 'predict' the output of windfarms up to 4 hours ahead (actually up to 40h but only 4h are relevant for scheduling your other power plants). The data is used to determine how to dispatch your dispatchable plants (or plan for it).
              Similar companies make prognosises for solar power.

              The dispatcher of a fleet of plants usually knows quite accurately how his wind and solar plants will perform in the foreseeable f

  • I can remember a flurry of interest in pairing large offshore windfarms in shallow European waters with large, wall-off "islands" of sea adjacent to the farm. Whenever there was excess wind for the grid offtake, seawater would be pumped into this enclosure, available for release as hydro when the wind slackened. Was this idea ever tried?

    • It's an old idea: in the 80s, the infamous "Plan Lievense" called for damming off the Markermeer in the Netherlands to create a reservoir for generating hydro power. The Plan is still a favourite example problem to pester students of civil engineering with so quite a few variations have been calculated. The original plan called for a 23m height differential with water being pumped into the reservoir, but was deemed to expensive and risky (a dam breach would cause massive flooding). There's talk of a simi [we-at-sea.org]
  • Installed capacity has meaning for hydro power, coal and nuclear. For solar and wind, it is like the relationship between the maximum speed on your car's speedometer vs what the roads and traffic allow.

    Here is what all of the wind power in UK is generating in this live grid display:

    https://www.gridwatch.templar.... [templar.co.uk]

    If you look at the tiny graphs under the dials it displays wind power as a blue line in the second column. It peaked at about 5 GW wind production on Sunday Sept 2, and then was nearly zero

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

      The concept that the wind is always blowing somewhere is not true for a place as small as the U.K.

      It always blows when I am cycling, and always against me. It's made doubly hard as my commute to and from work is uphill both ways.

  • How exactly does a 660MW plant power 600k homes ? Does each home only use 1.1KW ? seriously ?
    • Does each home only use 1.1KW ? seriously ?
      On average at a given time, yes. Actually much less.

    • The homes themselves use less. But if you add in all the additional support services needed for those homes (power for street lighting, water pressure, service workers, etc), it ends up being about that high. It's even more if you include industrial power usage to produce the things people buy to put in their homes (food, clothing, your car, TV, computer, etc).
    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
      working backwards, the average UK electricty bill is about £600, and it;s about £0.12/kWh, so that's 600/0.12 = 5000kWh. 5000/(365*24) is 0.6kW average. Given that people tend to not use that much when asleep, apart from the fridge and freezer, and not that much when at work, then yes 1.1kW is about right on average. Peak is another matter, but not everyone runs the kettle for tea at the same time, and less so given people don't tend to watch TV in the same way and so don't all rush to run the
  • I understand (not really, it is sort of stupid actually, who really can imagine 20,000 football fields stuck together) but this is about England for Gods' sake, can't you speak in terms of soccer fields!!!! ?

  • Nice to have as a supplement, to coal, water, nuclear, but, wind/solar is just an ADDED resource, not a REPLACEMENT resource. You have to have some place to STORE the energy created by wind/solar, which is a finite amount of energy. If there is a PEAK demand, and you don't have the SUPPLY capacity, then you have to cut back. With coal/nuclear, you can spin up the generators, to GENERATE more energy on demand. I don't have a problem with wind/solar, but, they cannot be a REPLACEMENT for coal/nuclear.
  • Even though Europe does have off shore Fresh water wind farms, the great lakes are still researching bird deaths. Ice build up on the lakes I can understand, not a lot of knowledge about that. But, bird deaths. Do these people not read or research already in place European Fresh Water wind farms. Or do they just like wasting money.
  • Where are we at with these things being large-scale bird grinders or not?

  • In my area when we have our frequent wind storms it is not rare to have a commercial vesel of large size lose power and be driven onto our beaches. In one case the bow of an ocean liner came across the sand and was resting in the swimming pool of a condominium. Fixing that sort of thing is very expensive. Now, can these windmills take a hit from a large ship? How well do these turbines do when we have 180 mph. winds that gust even higher? How often would an event be expected based on local historic ev
    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

      In my area when we have our frequent wind storms it is not rare to have a commercial vesel of large size lose power and be driven onto our beaches. In one case the bow of an ocean liner came across the sand and was resting in the swimming pool of a condominium. Fixing that sort of thing is very expensive. Now, can these windmills take a hit from a large ship? How well do these turbines do when we have 180 mph. winds that gust even higher? How often would an event be expected based on local historic events and what cost would be involved to repair or replace the turbine?

      There's a lot of coastline, not so much wind turbine, so the chances of a ship hitting a turbine is very small. They feather the props in high winds. There would be an issue if the feathering broke, but then the blades are varied to make the best of the wind anyway, so a misbehaving turbine would be spotted quickly and preemptively feathered. If the ability to point into the wind also went, that might be an issue, but they are pretty tough.

  • by FeelGood314 ( 2516288 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @01:31PM (#57270322)
    We need a base load of power generation. Something cheap that will generate a continuous amount of power. Ignore (Shoot) all the Green Peace virtue signalers and nuclear would be perfect for this. We also need peak production, something that can be throttled up and down easily. Hydro is best for this but requires actual geography to have provided it. Coal and natural gas also work. Tide, wind and solar don't actually fit in this model. They don't make power when we need it and we still don't have a good way of storing it. Batteries aren't good enough yet and pump and storage maintenance costs are too high (even if your capital is free and the electricity cost goes negative).

    Negative price - The UK government has guaranteed the operators they will pay a fixed price for the electricity produced by these windmills. That means that when the wind blows and no one wants the electricity the price of electricity will go negative. People will be paid to consume electricity. In Ontario, Ohio, Pennsylvanian and Michigan we did the same thing. Here the wind blows the most after everyone has gone to bed in January and February. This is also our lowest consumption time.

    I've dealt with the bureaucracy in electrical grids in many countries. The stupidity is amazing but the UK is special, they have an extra layer of cronyism and arrogance that no other country has.
    • Couldn't home or business users take advantage of the negative power rates to charge batteries that would be used to provide power during non-free times? And if enough users opted for this approach, the rates would become positive during those current negative rate periods and other periods might reduce due to lower power demand?

  • My son manages installation contracts for these things. One worthy noted the subsidy increased the farther offshore the turbine was. He went for the longest distance and went to Siemens to get them built. The sales staff no being dummies went to the engineers and ask if putting units that far out was possible. After some calculations they said sure. The sale people then ask when could they be delivered. Shocked the engineers replied ,"Do you know how much that is going to cost!"

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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