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NREL Releases Wind Curtailment Case Studies

By Michael Goggin, Electric Industry Analyst, AWEA
November 20, 2009   |   4 Comments

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Anonymous
November 25, 2009
The e-mails reported from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) will affect renewable energy stock? Do you think I should start dumping them now. The conspiracy behind the Anthropogenic Global Warming myth has been suddenly turned into Climategate .

We hear stories of conspiracy, collusion in exaggerating warming data, possibly illegal destruction embarrassing information, organized resistance to disclosure, manipulation of data, private admissions of flaws in their public claims and much more.

Any news in the US ?
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Anonymous
November 25, 2009
What about pumping up water with the exces of electric enregy, and reuse the stored energy on the aproriate moments?
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3 of 4
November 25, 2009
Am I the only one not seeing the connection between wind curtailment, and conspiracy theory? Great article on wind curtailment.
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4 of 4
December 2, 2009
This is a long-overdue study. The solution will be a combination of grid expansion and a real energy storage option. I'll present a paper on energy storage, ES2010-90377, at the ASME ES conference next spring. A portion of the abstract follows:

The levelized costs of delivered energy from the leading technologies for grid-scale energy storage are calculated using a model that considers likely number of cycles per year, expected lifetime, discount rate, duty cycle, and trends in the markets. The expected capital costs of the various options evaluated – pumped hydrostorage, underground pumped hydrostorage (UPHS), hydrogen fuel cells, carbon-lead-acid batteries, advanced adiabatic compressed air energy storage (AA-CAES), lead-acid batteries, lithium-ion batteries, flywheels, sodium sulfur batteries, ultra capacitors, and superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES) – are based on recent cost data to the extent possible. The marginal value of the delivered stored energy is analyzed using recent grid energy prices from regions of high wind-energy penetration. The above list is in order from most competitive to least competitive.

A lesser-known energy storage option, Windfuels, is also briefly reviewed. Here, excess off-peak electrical energy is used to synthesize standard liquid fuels, such as gasoline and jet fuel, from CO2 and H2O. Simulations have shown that innovations should make it practical to reduce CO2 to CO at 90% of theoretical efficiency limits. When combined with other process advances, it should then be possible to synthesize hydrocarbons and alcohols from point-source CO2 and off-peak clean grid energy (wind or nuclear) at system efficiencies in the range of 52-61%. The cost of the tanks for storing energy in jet fuel, ethanol, and diesel is only $0.02/kWhr. The cost of storing vast amounts of energy in batteries, compressed air, or flywheels would be several thousand times greater.
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