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Is the Sky the Limit for Wind Power?

Carnegie Institution for Science (Press Release)
June 19, 2009  |  5 Comments

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In the future, will wind power tapped by high-flying kites light up New York? A new study by scientists at the Carnegie Institution and California State University identifies New York as a prime location for exploiting high-altitude winds, which globally contain enough energy to meet world demand 100 times over. The researchers found that the regions best suited for harvesting this energy match with population centers in the eastern U.S. and East Asia, but fluctuating wind strength still presents a challenge for exploiting this energy source on a large scale.

Using 28 years of data from the National Center for Environmental Prediction and the Department of Energy, Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution’s Department of Global Ecology and Cristina Archer of California State University, Chico, compiled the first-ever global survey of wind energy available at high altitudes in the atmosphere. The researchers assessed potential for wind power in terms of “wind power density,” which takes into account both wind speed and air density at different altitudes.

“There is a huge amount of energy available in high altitude winds,” said coauthor Ken Caldeira. “These winds blow much more strongly and steadily than near-surface winds, but you need to go get up miles to get a big advantage. Ideally, you would like to be up near the jet streams, around 30,000 feet.”

Jet streams are meandering belts of fast winds at altitudes between 20 and 50,000 feet that shift seasonally, but otherwise are persistent features in the atmosphere. Jet stream winds are generally steadier and 10 times faster than winds near the ground, making them a potentially vast and dependable source of energy. Several technological schemes have been proposed to harvest this energy, including tethered, kite-like wind turbines that would be lofted to the altitude of the jet streams. Up to 40 megawatts of electricity could be generated by current designs and transmitted to the ground via the tether.

“We found the highest wind power densities over Japan and eastern China, the eastern coast of the United States, southern Australia, and north-eastern Africa,” said lead author Archer. “The median values in these areas are greater than 10 kilowatts per square meter. This is unthinkable near the ground, where even the best locations have usually less than one kilowatt per square meter.”

Included in the analysis were assessments of high altitude wind energy for the world’s five largest cities: Tokyo, New York, Sao Paulo, Seoul, and Mexico City. “For cities that are affected by polar jet streams such as Tokyo, Seoul, and New York, the high-altitude resource is phenomenal,” said Archer. “New York, which has the highest average high-altitude wind power density of any U.S. city, has an average wind power density of up to 16 kilowatts per square meter.”

Tokyo and Seoul also have high wind power density because they are both affected by the East Asian jet stream. Mexico City and Sao Paulo are located at tropical latitudes, so they are rarely affected by the polar jet streams and just occasionally by the weaker sub-tropical jets. As a result they have lower wind power densities than the other three cities.

“While there is enough power in these high altitude winds to power all of modern civilization, at any specific location there are still times when the winds do not blow,” said Caldeira. Even over the best areas, the wind can be expected to fail about five percent of the time. “This means that you either need back-up power, massive amounts of energy storage, or a continental or even global scale electricity grid to assure power availability. So, while high-altitude wind may ultimately prove to be a major energy source, it requires substantial infrastructure.”

Reference: Archer, C. L.; Caldeira, K. Global Assessment of High-Altitude Wind Power. Energies 2009, 2, 307-319.

"We found the highest wind power densities over Japan and eastern China, the eastern coast of the United States, southern Australia, and north-eastern Africa." -- Cristina Archer, California State University, Chico

5 Comments

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Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
January 27, 2011
This is nearly as stupid as the space-based solar foolishness. We need PLAUSIBLE solutions, not fantasy.

Don't get me wrong, I like a good fantasy as a diversion - I have a sizable collection of fantasy novels that I deeply enjoy... But fantasy shouldn't be the focus for real-world energy interests.

The only plausible way you could tap high altitude wind would be with a helium-filled loft connected to your turbine/generator combo... or to use a carbon nanotube braid with an aluminum sheething for an aluminum pipe construct that uses wind to give itself lift.

In the first case, the sky is the limit for size, but cost is exponential. A nice wind turbine today weighs ~50 tonnes... so good luck attaching that to a blimp and a several mile copper-sheethed tether.

For the second option - the kite option - you would lose most of your wind power just in providing the loft, and what is left would be generated with small (3-5 m) wingspan turbines, that would then have to be transmitted several miles over very small gage aluminum wire.

Either way, you'd be lucky to generated electricity at a price of less than ~$1000/W.

Next you'll tell us about mining the sun for hydrogen as an energy option. Leave the fantasy to the novelists... they're better at it anyway.
Mark DeTray
Mark DeTray
January 27, 2011
Any insights into the high-altitude wind resources of the Seattle area?
Gunther Beck
Gunther Beck
June 30, 2009
The important news is not that someone has a working, economic and tried solution. The message is: there is an energy source out there ==> Go and find a way to harvest it!

To be practical I would not look for the jetstreams as a first step. I would rather use a zeppelin / blip to get the windmill in place and keep it there. An altitude of a few hundred meters would be enough to gradually develop the concept and it might prove economic in all sorts of regions, including offshore, within a short time.
ANONYMOUS
June 29, 2009
Maybe it will autorotate into the Hudson. Watching lightning strike that thing would be awesome! Power Surge!
Herschel Specter
Herschel Specter
June 29, 2009
What is the weight of a tether that is at least 30,000 feet long and capable of transmitting up to 40 megawatts of electricity? How do you lift this tether and "kite" to this high altitude? What happens to people on the ground when a tether breaks ( a 30,000 foot radius encloses an area of about 80 square miles) and presumedly anyone in this area could be at risk? What happens when the kite or tether is struck by lightning? (Remember Ben Franklin's simple key/kite experiment.)

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