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The Bigger, the Greener? Considering the Size of Wind Turbines

Ysabel Yates, Contributor
June 27, 2012  |  6 Comments

Larger wind turbines can generate more electricity, but is that extra energy greener?

The answer is yes, the bigger the turbine the greener the energy, according to Marloes Caduff and her colleagues at the Institute for Environmental Engineering in Zurich who published a study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology. But the answer is complex.

It may seem odd to question the eco-friendliness of a renewable energy source. But Caduff and her team determined that if the production, transport, and retirement of bigger turbines is too environmentally-taxing, the trend towards larger ones won’t be good for the environment.

So the researchers devised a method to calculate the technology’s “global warming potential.”

To do this, the team borrowed the economic concept of progress rates. In an email interview, Caduff noted that, “if the progress rate is 100 percent, no learning takes place, hence no cost reduction is observed. So the lower the progress rate, the better.” The same applies for global warming potential: the smaller the number, the better.

To calculate global warming potential, the researchers looked at resource extraction, production of the turbines, disposal, as well as the learning curve for businesses to adopt the new manufacturing process.

By looking at “the impact per produced kilowatt hour (kWh) versus the total cumulative installation and production of wind turbines in Europe,” Caduff said, they found the environmental impact was reduced as more turbines were installed. The calculated environmental progress rate was 86 percent, resulting in a reduced global warming potential of 14 percent.

In other words: using more, big turbines is 14 percent better for the environment.

Because this result was calculated using data from Europe, adaptations would need to be made to determine its validity for other places. “Important changes would be the used electricity mix, wind speeds and wind shear, transport distances, raw material production and disposal,” says Caduff.

Still, the results can help wind turbine producers or investors of wind farms “determine the global warming potential impacts of turbines, ranging between 12.5 and 90 meters in diameter, without having to perform an entire life-cycle analysis study,” according to Caduff. This saves both time and money, which will help spur on the trend towards larger turbines.

And if bigger turbines equal a cleaner environment, this is a trend worth following.

This story was originally published on ecomagination and was republished with permission.

6 Comments

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Aaron Allen
Aaron Allen
July 9, 2012
From reading about w.t. on-site/at-work, the very large ones seem to experience failure [fires, damaged blades, etc.] more than the 'medium' sized ones. Is it better practice to station a few more medium ones on smaller windfarms and bene fit from fewer catastrophic failures? Are remote sites easier to control from a distance if a few more 'medium' w.t. are installed?..Aaron Allen...
ANONYMOUS
June 30, 2012
If we are going to discuss the effect that various sources of energy have on wildlife populations, here's a couple examples that I would point out. The first one is the classic story about how John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil saved the whales. If it wasn't for Rockefeller making kerosene cheap and readily available, the whales would have been hunted to extinction for their oil. Another example is the growth in caribou populations around the Alaskan oil pipeline. It's not all bad.
Gerry Wootton
Gerry Wootton
June 29, 2012
Yeah - fly in the face of real data. Larger turbines kill fewer raptors per MWh than smaller ones. The biggest danger to raptors in the US is people who shoot them closely followed by people who (mostly inadvertently) poison them followed by poorly designed transmission lines. The cruellest death for raptors comes from government agencies that relocate raptors away from airports to kill or be killed in some other raptor's territory. This is a story that has longer legs than it deserves. The number of raptor populations endangered by power generation is disproportionately biased towards those affected by pollution from coal fired power plants.
Kevin Emmerich
Kevin Emmerich
June 29, 2012
Larger turbines kill more raptors and the noise is thought to attract bats which die from barotrauma. When talking "green" don't turn it into a conversation only about C02. Remember, wind energy depends a lot on natural gas peaker plants to handle the intermittent energy load. Wildlife needs to be factored into the green equation as well. Luckily, wind energy is a collapsing industry both economically and viably. Kill the PTC!
Kevin Emmerich
Kevin Emmerich
June 29, 2012
Larger turbines kill more raptors and the noise is thought to attract bats which die from barotrauma. When talking "green" don't turn it into a conversation only about C02. Remember, wind energy depends a lot on natural gas peaker plants to handle the intermittent energy load. Wildlife needs to be factored into the green equation as well. Luckily, wind energy is a collapsing industry both economically and viably. Kill the PTC!
ANONYMOUS
June 29, 2012
"It may seem odd to question the eco-friendliness of a renewable energy source". Frankly, it seems odd to me that any engineer or scientist thinks in terms of "eco-friendliness". "Eco-friendliness" is a completely subjective and meaningless term, and it can be defined however the researcher chooses to define it. The same can be said of "global warming potential". Having said that, I would agree that with wind turbines bigger-is-definitely-better for most trends. Bigger wind turbines simply achieve much better LCOE numbers, which is the only real factor of significance in how widely commercial wind gets deployed. In the end, it just boils down to physics and economics. A single 6MW wind turbine installation costs far less than two 3MW turbines. The larger blades of the 6MW machine will also be more efficient at capturing the available wind energy, and thus will be more productive. It's not so much the case that bigger turbines themselves will result in a "cleaner environment". It's more the case that as turbines become larger, their LCOE rapidly becomes smaller. It's this one simple basic economic factor that will drive commercial wind energy growth, and not "eco-friendliness" or "global warming potential" nonsense.

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