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Power China

World's New Largest Wind Farm Could Power 13 Million Homes (interestingengineering.com) 81

China plans to break its own record for the world's largest wind farm by constructing a new one before 2025 that could power more than 13 million homes. Interesting Engineering reports: The 14th five-year plan for Chaozhou, China's Guangdong province, was released last week, outlining the city's ambitious plans for a 43.3 gigawatt (GW) project in the Taiwan Strait. Work on the project will begin "before 2025." It will surpass the largest wind farm in the world once it is finished, according to Guangdong province officials. The 10-kilometer-long farm, which will have thousands of strong wind turbines, will operate between 75 and 185 kilometers (47 and 115 miles) offshore. And because of the region's distinctive topographical features and windy location, these turbines will be able to run between 43 percent to 49 percent of the time, meaning 3,800 to 4,300 hours each year.

A gigawatt is one billion watts, and 3 million solar panels are required to produce one gigawatt of power. 100 million LEDs or 300,000 typical European homes may each be powered by one gigawatt. The facility's 43.3 GW of power-generating capacity could supply electricity to 13 million households, which is equal to 4.3 billion LED lights, as per Euronews. The Jiuquan Wind Power base in China, a huge facility with a 20 gigawatt capacity, presently holds the distinction of being the world's largest wind farm.

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World's New Largest Wind Farm Could Power 13 Million Homes

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  • by phayes ( 202222 ) on Saturday October 29, 2022 @05:30AM (#63008061) Homepage

    Yeah because China building their way further and further towards Taiwan, encroaching their way to being better able to invade, well that's not AT ALL one of the project's main objectives...

    • Are you suggesting no country should be allowed to build on their land in the direction of any other country? Don't drunk post.

      • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

        When you read his post and came to this conclusion you my friend must be drunk, because he only pointed out what that meant for Taiwan, not that it should be forbidden.

        But I do understand his thoughts as China with it's nationalism cannot be trusted in any sense that this will not have an additional use case.

        • Next sensational Sloshdat headline: China attacks Taiwan with armed wind turbines.
        • Yeah, because windfarms are SUCH a useful military outpost for staging operations from.
        • What this means for Taiwan: nothing. Especially since it's a wind farm. You want to do something which matters, build a nuclear powerplant on the border of a non nuclear friendly country, build an aluminium smelter on the border close to the other country's town.

          But wind farms? I can only conclude the world is a perfectly peaceful utopia without any problems anywhere if this is something you decide to give any fucks what do ever about.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            What this means for Taiwan: nothing. Especially since it's a wind farm. You want to do something which matters, build a nuclear powerplant on the border of a non nuclear friendly country, build an aluminium smelter on the border close to the other country's town.

            But wind farms? I can only conclude the world is a perfectly peaceful utopia without any problems anywhere if this is something you decide to give any fucks what do ever about.

            I also cannot think of anything more strategic to attack by Taiwan if pus

            • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

              And actually I need to set some things straight:

              1.) a modern(most like since 2003!?) wind turbine does not engage "brakes", the blades just "feather" it's called a "fan" position

              The braking is done aerodynamically, (hint: "pitch" not "stall") Blades
              are feathered.

              Often there is a break disk which is basically a parking break to engage some kind of form fitting rotor lock bolt:
              https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

              But the blades actually even then create enough lift for a very mild rotation.

              Which is good from a tr

          • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

            I can only conclude the world is a perfectly peaceful utopia without any problems

            And I have actuallyy working experience with (onshore and offshore) wind turbines and have observed the radar scattering of the rotors and I also know how a wind turbine sounds under water.

            Under normal circumstances you would be correct, "it's just a wind farm". However in this setting a wind turbine along with the farm is a valuable strategic post also due to it's height for different kinds of military purpose.

            - cloak/shadow
            - reconnaissance / radar / optical / sonar
            - communication
            - jamming

            And in case of Ch

      • Are you suggesting no country should be allowed to build on their land in the direction of any other country? Don't drunk post.

        China isn't building this wind farm on their "land". They're planning on building it in the Taiwan Strait which is 180 miles (approximately) wide. Territorial borders only extend out to 12 nautical miles.

        By building this farm they will then claim they need to "protect" this farm and so will post their navy at even greater distances, thus continuing its efforts to claim the entire strait is theirs. They will also claim they can intercept any ship which comes remotely close, but guaranteed those ships will

    • Wind Mills are basically targets:
      Well in a conflict then Taiwan also gains leverage, because bascially take a machine gun, grenade or a special missile to the wind mill and it is out of order.

      Blast ~1-2m of one blade tip and the rotor will have an imbalance and the turbine will shut down - or in case of continued operation eat up all it's calculated life time in a fraction of time.

      Or the sabotage way, use a relativley small distributed amount of plastic explosives at the common downwind side of the tower to

      • It would be better for Taiwan to tap the power cable and steal half the generated power.
      • All things are targets. You'd rather have the enemy blow up your windmills than your nuke plants. You can probably take out a wind plant with a sniper rifle, it's not like they're armored. Put a couple HE rounds in 'em and you're done.

        • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

          There is a difference in the level of ease to disable such an installation in a sense to also hinder possible repair.

          And basically not all things are targets per se, when you have that approach you will waste precious ammo on not strategically important targets and then you will end up like russia and Taiwan in a direct conflict has no ammo to waste.

          In case of russia I'm not totally "unhappy" with the outcome of their wastefulness.

    • Yeah because China building their way further and further towards Taiwan, encroaching their way to being better able to invade, well that's not AT ALL one of the project's main objectives...

      Dude, It's a wind farm, not a fleet of 13 million hover tanks.

  • .. will serve 13 Million Homes.

  • ...it's communist electricity. It'll suck the souls out of people's electronic devices, leaving them spiritually hopeless & desolate. We must save the poor Chinese people from this evil!
  • It will probably power data centers. But regardless where the electricity goes, less cola is good.
    • Why? Electricity supply isn't actually as stable as you think it is, even in Guangzhou. If there were blackouts and people found out that the massive windfarm they paid for weren't supplying electricity to them, there would be protests.

      Yes, protests still happen in China. Quite frequently, in fact.
      • Protests... in China?... Srsly?
        • Yes. They even make the news here sometimes, but most of the time they don't report it here.

          Are you seriously that deluded by your comic book understanding of China? sErIoUsLy!?!?!?!!

          Literally there have been protests in Shanghai over the lockdown. There have been protests when people's bank accounts were suddenly inaccessible because some banks were caught out with bad loans. There had been a highly visible protest on a bridge before Xi Jinping's re-appointment.

          You're a fucking moron if you think
          • You're a fucking moron if you think Chinese people don't protest, or if you think the CCP is actually some 1984-all-powerful-all-seeing government that can prevent all protests before it happens.

            Shanghai covid lockdowns speak for themselves. Their protest of being locked in their homes, denied urgent medical care and literally starving to death consisted of screaming out the windows of their homes, banging pots and pans and killing themselves by jumping out the window.

            They are spineless slaves.

        • https://www.japantimes.co.jp/n... [japantimes.co.jp]

          Did your homework for you.

          You outed yourself as a fucking uninformed moron who can't think beyond the American narrative you were indoctrinated with.
  • I will never get why "bigger/biggest" is news worthy ... besides the point.

    If you want to learn something from the U.S., it is often worth looking at California and Texas, compare and contrast. Both big states that are actually large countries, very differently run. Both states get some things right, and other things wrong. Sometimes spectacularly so. Irrespective your political persuasion, worth a look.

    There is quite a bit of wind power (and a bit more than half as much solar) in Texas. Why? Because it was

  • The good thing about sustainable energy ( and science ) is that it doesn't matter if it's a horrible dictatorship doing it, the whole of mankind still benefits.
  • I will believe it when the wind blows...

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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