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Last edited by Ronald Brak; 13-July-2008 at 03:32 PM. |
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And on a visit to Texas once I asked my uncle how he felt about all those oil wells messing up the view, and his reply was, basically, how are they messing it up? He seemed to feel the only way to improve the view would be to add a bunch of cattle grazing among the pumps.
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All of this is moot, really, because both Nuclear and wind will be built in large numbers as fast as possible for the foreseeable future. It's all the same to me, really, as I am lucky enough to work in both industries. ![]()
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Overnight cost is the standard way of showing construction costs. If you want the total lifetime costs, you look for the levelized cost of energy. Unfortunately, LCOE is a pain to calculate and also very dependent on assumptions--which makes it hard to compare LCOE numbers from different sources. Generally though, new Nuclear has about the same LCOE as new pulverized coal, while Wind is comparable to natural gas.
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I agree with your points (I've been to New England and have walked through English countryside, albeit albeit between the air base and a bar...). However, I still think the skinny white plastic fans are an eyesore. And unnecessary given the available alternatives.
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I am Mugs, of the Alien clan of Usa, Nordamerica, a Terran, of Sol. Human. Whoever says "perception is reality" is daft. It's merely an abstraction, and often not a very good one. |
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Speaking of windmills, I thought of all those Dutch School paintings full of them.
And to reply to Len Moran: Len, I was making an observation, not necessarily condoning it. Although I admit I personally find them attractive, or at least not offensive. Certainly less so than a large coal strip mine. And note that last statement is aesthetic, not necessarily practical.
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The Devil offered me power. I told him I preferred aperture. |
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I've been following wind power, a few hours per year for 30 years. I don't think the first wind turbine instalation has reached pay back yet, but the ecconomics look good for the near future. Expensive failures were common until recently. With some subsidies, most of the present breed should make money for all concerned, before they need to be decomissioned.
I don't find them an eye sore, but I have a little sympathy for persons who don't want the view to change. Each turbine makes about as much noise as a typical home air conditioner, so they are not deadly silent, but neither are cows, birds, frogs, crickets nor airplanes. Large numbers of big turbines will require construction of more high tension power lines. Typical power companies may not want to pay more than two cents per kilowatt hour (average) as the wind and thus the electricity can stop with seconds warning. The big coal and nuclear plants are poorly adapted to supplying power in spirts. Gas turbines can be on line in one minute, but that may mean some homes loose power for a few seconds. Solar typically gives minutes instead of seconds warning that power will drop to near zero. Perhaps a hundred wind speed gages (surounding the wind farm) connected to a computer can predict most wind stopping 5 minutes in advance, but that will add significant cost. North Dekota is an other great place for steady wind, but like New England, ice, snow and storms are significant hazards. Wind shear or gusts to 70 knots put the investment at high risk, so the computer forgets about making steady electricity and concentrates on saving the wind turbine and it's tower. Neil |
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This flow of information obviates any need for any additional wind speed guages.
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I am Mugs, of the Alien clan of Usa, Nordamerica, a Terran, of Sol. Human. Whoever says "perception is reality" is daft. It's merely an abstraction, and often not a very good one. |
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I think my 100 wind speed, and wind direction gages are much better for both purposes. 100 chances to detect an approching tornado minutes before the first turbine is threatened. The computer can notify the regional load handler that power will be reduced in 4 minutes, perhaps to zero. 4 minutes may be long enough for the regional load handler to find power it can purchase to replace the power from the wind farm and/or start some off line gas turbines. In 2 minutes the computer may be able to guestimate how many wind turbines need to come off the grid, for how many minutes.
With only data from turbines, some wind turbines need to be taken off the grid with in seconds of first warning instead of 4 minutes. The shut down message will reach the regional controller about the same instant that his insturments show the megawatts from the wind farm is dropping. The wind farm contribution to the grid may be zero, by the time this is identified as a tornado, and the off grid time can be guestimated. The tornado can do a lot of damage even with the props featherd as the wind direction will not be predictable, until this is identified as a tornado. It will likely take more than a second to rotate the turbine 180 degrees to keep the blades facing into the wind. Neil |
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90MW farm with a $1.15 million per MW cost, 38% capacity factor, 2.93 cents/kWh electricity wholesale price increasing 2% per year, 20 year life 10 year production tax credit of 1.8 cents per kWh, 50% bonus tax depreciation, and $30k/year O&M will break even in: 7.5 years. About a third of cash flow to equity in this scenario is actual sales of electricity. As you can see, a lot of assumptions have to go into any estimate of profitability. (I pulled this example from a presentation which I cannot post, unfortunately. It was from 2003, so the exact numbers have changed a bit for a representative site).Quote:
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The rest of what you’re describing is what WFM software does, with varying degrees of maturity in design in different sites. The level of grid integration you’re talking about is the current cutting edge of the technology.
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And keep in mind while a farm may be a bunch of windmills here, there's another farm with a bunch more over there, all of which are linked to a central computer programmed with various algorithms to take maximum advantage of the winds while minimizing any damage.
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I am Mugs, of the Alien clan of Usa, Nordamerica, a Terran, of Sol. Human. Whoever says "perception is reality" is daft. It's merely an abstraction, and often not a very good one. |
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The tornado question is an interesting one. Would a tornado taking out part of a wind farm be more expensive that a tornado nailing a coal plant?
That is an interesting question. Wind turbines are pretty tough and the blades can feather when the wind gets too strong. Still, a direct hit by a tornado would probably destroy the blades at least. As for coal plants, the ones I've seen look pretty rugged but they'd probably be off line for some time, especially if the cooling tower is damaged. In addition to the cost of repairs, you have to consider the loss in electric sales while the wind farm or power plant is offline. One thing about wind turbines is that you don't have to wait until all of them are repaired before you can generate any electricity - as soon as the first one is operational, you're back in partial business. I doubt the same can be said for a coal powered plant. |