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The Power Above: Kite Power Seeks High Altitude Power

Mark Halper, Contributor
August 22, 2012  |  13 Comments

There's a band of people in the northwest hills of Italy who are fishing for the big one in the sky.

They’re not a religious sect trawling for a deity. They’re part of a Turin-based startup called Kite Gen Research and, as their name implies, they want to generate electricity by flying kites — really big kites, really high.

The basic idea is simple: Unreel a huge piece of fabric into mile high winds that will haul the thing along at expressway speed. Tether the fast spinning string to earthbound alternators  and crank out megawatts of power.

“Imagine you have a fishing rod, but instead of a fish, you have a kite,” says Stefano Serra, a Kite Gen consultant. “The fish pulls away. Just attach an alternator to the reel, and you produce energy.”

Or, as Kite Gen president and founder Massimo Ippolito likes to say in describing the physics, “It’s not our invention. It’s the wind.”

A Constant Howl

What Ippolito means is that Kite Gen is leveraging the laws of nature. Higher altitude winds blow more constantly than those at ground level. According to Ippolito, the winds he’s targeting are available for 6,000 hours a year, compared to what he says can average 1,500 hours for conventional ground wind turbines.

The higher altitude winds are also faster than on the ground.

And any increase in wind speed yields an even greater increase in wind power, as wind power is the cube of its speed so even small increases in speed can lead to big boosts in power. If wind is streaming at 20 mph on the ground while traveling double that, or 40 mph, at 3,000 feet, its power at altitude would be 8 times the power on ground.

The Highest Energy Density Power

The physics of wind power means that the high altitude wind sources like the jet stream – the current of air that gushes along at around 4.3 to 9.8 miles high, typically at over 100 mph — are among the most coveted.

“It’s the highest energy density of renewable power source available on Earth,” says climate scientist Ken Caldeira at the Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford University. He notes that the raw power of the jet stream can reach 30,000 watts per square meter and can typically be 10,000 watts per square meter, compared to an average of 300 watts per square meters for solar on the Earth’s surface.

“But it’s a little bit like the fusion power of the renewable energy world,” says Caldeira, “where it’s not something that’s practical economically today.”

Ippolito is after a more modest goal. He thinks that winds at Kite Gen’s altitudes of between between half a mile to just over a mile high will on average run at double the speed of ground wind.

Another advantage: The kite sweeps across a three-dimensional area of a square kilometer – 100 times more than what Ippolito notes is the conventional two-dimensional, one-hectare sweep of a conventional wind blade.

The net effect, says Ippolito, is an “energy returned on energy invested” (EROEI) that’s 160 times better than conventional wind turbines.

Wanted: Good Mechanics

Unlike other airborne wind energy companies like Sky Windpower in San Diego and Makani Power in Alameda, Calif., Kite Gen is not sending down electricity.

Instead, it is transferring energy mechanically via a rapidly unravelling string made from Dyneema, a polyethylene material manufactured by Dutch company DSM that as consultant Serra notes “looks like a shoe lace but can lift a car.”

Two strings reel out from spinning drums attached to alternators — KiteGen calls the units “STEMS”. Once the wind pulls out the full length of the strings, one of the strings tugs on one end of the kite, pulling it limply back down for about 20 seconds, and then releasing it back to the wind for about two minutes, in a yo-yo motion.

There are a total of 8 alternators, combining for a capacity of 3.2 megawatts per STEM – enough for a small utility scale generation. Ippolito envisions clustering scores of STEMs together on farms with hundreds of megawatts of capacity. He’s using kites that measure about 50 square meters (about 538 feet) and imagines lofting kites three times that size.

In Concept We Trust

Kite Gen has launched numerous trials in Sommariva Perno, a municipality in the Piedmont area of Italy about 25 miles southeast of Turin, and about 1,312 feet above sea level. “We’ve proven the concept,” says Ippolito.

The engineering is still a work in progress. The company is testing different kite fabrics – it has used nylon and Dacron, and will examine carbon fiber. The STEM system includes low-tech pulleys and manipulators (two fingers that pull on the kite strings from the end of a long rod) and a high-tech IT system with sensors and software that keep the kite at optimal altitudes and angles.

Things tend to break. “We are dealing with energy that is not a joke – energy that exerts huge forces,” Ippolito explains.

The company hopes to raise $62 million to perfect its technologies and build a 150-megawatt farm of about 50 STEMs. It wants to bring in industrial partners and other sources of financing to pick up from the $12 million it has raised from a combination of the European Union and private investors, including Ippolito, Serra, and a group called SOTER (Society for the Transition to Renewable Energy).

The additional funds could well help Kite Gen cast away its engineering barriers. Then, the company could potentially land a big fish in the pursuit of CO2-free energy. Otherwise, it might tell the tale of the one that got away.

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

Lead image courtesy of KiteGen

13 Comments

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Joe Barnes
Joe Barnes
October 5, 2012
I have a feeling that you people across the pond are smoking a bit too much wacky bacca. You are taking a nut to crack a sledge hammer. The problems that your kite flying will cause to mankind will far out weigh the benefits that they will provide.The power that you will generate from these kites will cancel itself out by the cost of the power to wind it back in.A least the invention of that material that is capable of lifting a car has made this project a bit more viable, rather than using a six inch diameter steel rope weighing a few hundred tonnes.Hurray for progress is all I have to say, but please put up a bloody big warning sign when you launch your first array of kites, they will probably wipe out a couple of your States. Oh well, I have warned you.
Peter Bradshaw
Peter Bradshaw
August 30, 2012
@reBen I think your additional explanation must be about correct. When the kite has traveled about as far downwind as it can, one string is stopped, the kite will essentially flatten, and stop, it can then be hauled back (by both strings in an uneven position, and at a much lower force) to the beginning point, the second string is then held, the first released a bit until the kite is full open again, and then both strings are released to turn the generator. Clearly one would need enough kites in an assembly to even out the generation, but that should then be enough to work nicely. Clearly it would have to be marked on aeronautical flight maps, and ideally would have lights attached.

A nice idea, hope it works out.
ANONYMOUS
August 27, 2012
Hi Mark,

the idea sounds interesting, but i'd like to see a power wind kite with 10MW. How will you control a mass of 400to in the wind if its only fixed with a rope?
Whats with the cost efficiency, tell me the price per kw/h.
A windmill can work for 20 Years. so please make a calculation for the hole investment.
Please correct me if i am wrong, but with the actual info's we better spend our workingtime on realistic solutions.
But i am interested in your calculations. And i'am always interested in new ideas.

greetings from Germany.
Benjamin Gorman
Benjamin Gorman
August 24, 2012
@Jerry Olson:

Certainly, the "reeling-in" part of the design was not well described (careless journalism) but your own lack of imagination or engineering savvy is hardly a justification to launch a non sequitur attack on Obama. Please stay focused.

I'm no engineer, but with a moment's thought, and based on the minimal description, I can easily guess that the kite's airfoil stability can be disrupted by manipulation of one of the tether lines (or perhaps a third "control" line would be used); brief application of this force-- at a relatively small energy cost-- would be sufficient to deform the airfoil such that it drops out of the wind (à la acrobatic two-line "stunt" kites). Once the control tether is restored to full length (just a release action), the airfoil restores itself under the wind's force, and the process cycles.

Further, as mentioned in the article, winds at altitude tend to be more stable than near-ground winds, so I don't think there would be "a sky full of kites whipping about," as nadianichols put it. Getting the kites into the air at first might be fun. Maybe entire schools of children all pulling the tethers and running through the fields! Imagine that!
JERRY OLSON
JERRY OLSON
August 24, 2012
"Once the wind pulls out the full length of the strings, one of the strings tugs on one end of the kite, pulling it limply back down for about 20 seconds, and then releasing it back to the wind for about two minutes, in a yo-yo motion."
So all of this "yo-yo motion" is accomplished with no net expenditure of energy??? Oh I see they have finally invented a perpetual motion machine!!
More "renewable energy" BS dipping into Obama's deep pockets.
Penelope Gray
Penelope Gray
August 23, 2012
I agree with you, Chris. If MET towers are under a certain height they aren't required to have lights. Crop dusters are the primary victims of these unmarked MET towers and it's tragic. I would imagine a sky full of kites whipping about would be absolute chaos. That someone even wrote an article about such a scenario is befuddling.
Gerard Vaughan
Gerard Vaughan
August 23, 2012
What are the odds upon whitworth-seth being some kind of oil-junky?
About 5\4 On. Of course the Joe public blindly believe anything that he might suggest. The atmosphere's energy comes from the Sun. How can such a mind-boggling entity even begin to be grasped by so minute a mind? Answer - it cannot. Maybe it can do multiplication sums tho. There maybe hope. How about kW per square metre from the Sun Times Half the surface area of the Earth, then maybe compare this to a few Gigawatts. Maybe he needs reminding, just in case he was ever aware, that the greenhouse effect increases the trapping of this mind-boggling power arriving constantly from The Sun. We could not ever hope to extract even a fraction of the increase in this energy retained, that has occurred from the increase in greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere.
Christian Fox
Christian Fox
August 23, 2012
MET towers are stationary, and have lights (hopefully). tether lines whipping around in the sky would seem to be a more risky situation.
Penelope Gray
Penelope Gray
August 23, 2012
Air travel would simply have to be restricted to kite free corridors, not a problem! Private pilots would have to sign a "fly by their own risk" release form. Pilots are dying in US by hitting unmarked MET towers that aren't on their air maps. No big deal, right?
Christian Fox
Christian Fox
August 23, 2012
What about interference with aircraft? I wouls think the FAA would habe alot of restrictions/conditions.
SETH WHITWORTH
SETH WHITWORTH
August 23, 2012
While the power available is great it comes at an expense. I would be interested in modeling to see what the effect of extracting this much power out of the jet stream would have on weather paterns. It may only be a small fraction of the total energy in the jet stream but to think it would have no impact would be foolish. If weather paterns change even slightly, a few more hurricanes one year for instance, these projects could be blamed by the public even if the change is due to normal flucuations in the weather.
Remember, public opinion is a fickle thing.
Ali Yaras
Ali Yaras
August 23, 2012
I have seen concepts of some exciting designs for kites and other tethered wind energy capturing devices, all of which are profoundly exciting and necessary as the HAWT configuration has its own limitations and enlargening the rotor diameter or heigtening the tower is only possible to a certain extent.
It would be great to see an overview of alternative wind technologies at this website in order to both better understand what awaits us around the corner as well as to gain an insight to why certain alternatives never really lifted off the ground.

Regards
Gerard Vaughan
Gerard Vaughan
August 23, 2012
I had the same idea a few years back, but ditched it because of the well-know problems of kite-flying. Tangled strings, getting it off the ground, crashes, for instance. My idea was to hoist my very effective Turbine-Alternator device aloft under a kite. Then there is the downlead power-cable. They solved that by placing the generator on terra firma. Good idea ! Can someone put me out of my misery by explaining how they re-wind the cord? And we must assume that this stuff Never breaks ? There are at least two cords ? High altitude winds are Sooo tempting.

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