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Ron Prinn MIT: Wind
Turbines Could Cause Temperatures to Rise
March 15, 2010
Wind power has emerged
as a viable renewable energy source in recent years — one that
proponents say could lessen the threat of global warming. Although the
American Wind Energy Association estimates that only about 2 percent of
U.S. electricity is currently generated from wind turbines, the U.S.
Department of Energy has said that wind power could account for a fifth
of the nation’s electricity supply by 2030.
But a new MIT analysis may serve to temper enthusiasm about wind power,
at least at very large scales. Ron Prinn, TEPCO Professor of Atmospheric
Science, and principal research scientist Chien Wang of the Department
of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, used a climate model to
analyze the effects of millions of wind turbines that would need to be
installed across vast stretches of land and ocean to generate wind power
on a global scale. Such a massive deployment could indeed impact the
climate, they found, though not necessarily with the desired outcome.
In a paper published online Feb. 22 in Atmospheric Chemistry and
Physics, Wang and Prinn suggest that using wind turbines to meet 10
percent of global energy demand in 2100 could cause temperatures to rise
by one degree Celsius in the regions on land where the wind farms are
installed, including a smaller increase in areas beyond those regions.
Their analysis indicates the opposite result for wind turbines installed
in water: a drop in temperatures by one degree Celsius over those
regions. The researchers also suggest that the intermittency of wind
power could require significant and costly backup options, such as
natural gas-fired power plants.
Prinn cautioned against interpreting the study as an argument against
wind power, urging that it be used to guide future research that
explores the downsides of large-scale wind power before significant
resources are invested to build vast wind farms. “We’re not pessimistic
about wind,” he said. “We haven’t absolutely proven this effect, and
we’d rather see that people do further research.”
Daniel Kirk-Davidoff, a chief scientist for MDA Federal Inc., which
develops remote sensing technologies, and adjunct professor of
meteorology at the University of Maryland, has examined the climate
impacts of large-scale wind farms in previous studies. To him, the most
promising result of the MIT analysis is that it indicates that the
large-scale installation of wind turbines doesn’t appear to slow wind
flow so much that it would be impossible to generate a desirable amount
of energy. “When you put the wind turbines in, they are generating the
kind of power you’d hope for,” he said.
Tapping the wind resource
Previous studies have predicted that annual world energy demand will
increase from 14 terawatts (trillion watts) in 2002 to 44 terawatts by
2100. In their analysis, Prinn and Wang focus on the impact of using
wind turbines to generate five terawatts of electric power.
Using a climate model developed by the U.S. National Center for
Atmospheric Research, the researchers simulated the aerodynamic effects
of large-scale wind farms — located both on land and on the ocean — to
analyze how the atmosphere, ocean and land would respond over a 60-year
span.
For the land analysis, they simulated the effects of wind farms by using
data about how objects similar to turbines, such as undulating hills and
clumps of trees, affect surface “roughness,” or friction that can
disturb wind flow. After adding this data to the model, the researchers
observed that the surface air temperature over the wind farm regions
increased by about one degree Celsius, which averages out to an increase
of .15 degrees Celsius over the entire global surface.
According to Prinn and Wang, this temperature increase occurs because
the wind turbines affect two processes that play critical roles in
determining surface temperature and atmospheric circulation: vertical
turbulent motion and horizontal heat transport. Turbulent motion refers
to the process by which heat and moisture are transferred from the land
or ocean surface to the lower atmosphere. Horizontal heat transport is
the process by which steady large-scale winds transport excessive heat
away from warm regions, generally in a horizontal direction, and
redistribute it to cooler regions. This process is critical for
large-scale heat redistribution, whereas the effects of turbulent motion
are generally more localized.
In the analysis, the wind turbines on land reduced wind speed,
particularly on the downwind side of the wind farms, which reduced the
strength of the turbulent motion and horizontal heat transport processes
that move heat away from the Earth’s surface. This resulted in less heat
being transported to the upper parts of the atmosphere, as well as to
other regions farther away from the wind farms. The effect is similar to
being at the beach on a windy summer day: If the wind weakened or
disappeared, it would get warmer.
In contrast, when examining ocean-based wind farms, Prinn and Wang found
that wind turbines cooled the surface by more than one degree Celsius.
They said that these results are unreliable, however, because in their
analysis, they modeled the effects of wind turbines by introducing
surface friction in the form of large artificial waves. But they
acknowledge that this is not an accurate comparison, meaning that a
better way of simulating marine-based wind turbines must be developed
before reliable conclusions can be made.
In addition to changes in temperatures and surface heat fluxes, they
also observed changes in large-scale precipitation, particularly at the
mid-latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere. Although these changes
exceeded 10 percent in some areas, the global total changes were not
very large, according to Prinn and Wang.
To
investigate the effect of wind variability on the intermittency in wind
power generation, the researchers used the climate model to estimate the
monthly-mean wind power consumption and electrical generation for each
continent, concluding that there are very large and geographically
extensive seasonal variations, particularly over North and South
America, Africa and the Middle East. They explain that this
unreliability means that an electrical generation system with greatly
increased use of wind turbines would still require backup generation
even if continental-scale power lines enabled electrical transmission
from windy to non-windy areas.
Although Prinn and Wang believe their results for the land-based wind
farms are robust, Wang called their analysis a “proof-of-concept” study
that requires additional theoretical and modeling work, as well as field
experiments for complete verification.
Their next step is to address how to simulate ocean-based wind farms
more accurately. They plan to collaborate with aeronautical engineers to
develop parameters for the climate model that will allow them to
simulate turbines in coastal waters. |