Posted on 08/13/2011 10:01:29 AM PDT by neverdem
The Wind-Energy Myth
The claims for this "green" source of energy wither in the Texas heat.
Hot? Don’t count on wind energy to cool you down. That’s the lesson emerging from the stifling heat wave that’s hammering Texas.
Over the past week or so, Texans have been consuming record-breaking quantities of electricity, and ERCOT, the state’s grid operator, has warned of rolling blackouts if customers don’t reduce their consumption.
Texas has 10,135 megawatts of installed wind-generation capacity. That’s nearly three times as much as any other state. But during three sweltering days last week, when the state set new records for electricity demand, the state’s vast herd of turbines proved incapable of producing any serious amount of power.
Consider the afternoon of August 2, when electricity demand hit 67,929 megawatts. Although electricity demand and prices were peaking, output from the state’s wind turbines was just 1,500 megawatts, or about 15 percent of their total nameplate capacity. Put another way, wind energy was able to provide only about 2.2 percent of the total power demand even though the installed capacity of Texas’s wind turbines theoretically equals nearly 15 percent of peak demand. This was no anomaly. On four days in August 2010, when electricity demand set records, wind energy was able to contribute just 1, 2, 1, and 1 percent, respectively, of total demand.
Over the past few years, about $17 billion has been spent installing wind turbines in Texas. Another $8 billion has been allocated for transmission lines to carry the electricity generated by the turbines to distant cities. And now, Texas ratepayers are on the hook for much of that $25 billion, even though they can’t count on the wind to keep their air conditioners running when temperatures soar.
That $25 billion could have been used to build about 5,000 megawatts of highly reliable nuclear generation capacity, or as much as 25,000 megawatts of natural-gas-fired capacity, all of which could have been reliably put to work during the hottest days of summer.
The wind-energy lobby has been masterly at garnering huge subsidies and mandates by claiming that its product is a “green” alternative to conventional electricity. But the hype has obscured a dirty little secret: When power demand is highest, wind energy’s output is generally low. The reverse is also true: Wind-energy production is usually highest during the middle of the night, when electricity use is lowest.
The incurable intermittency and extreme variability of wind energy requires utilities and grid operators to continue relying on conventional sources of generation like coal, natural gas, and nuclear fuel. Nevertheless, 29 states, plus the District of Columbia, now have renewable-energy mandates. Those expensive mandates cannot be met with solar energy, which, despite enormous growth in recent years, still remains a tiny player in the renewable sector. If policymakers want to meet those mandates, landowners and citizens will have to learn to live with sprawling forests of noisy, 45-story-tall wind turbines.
The main motive for installing all those turbines is that they are supposed to help reduce carbon-dioxide emissions, which, in turn, is supposed to help prevent global temperature increases. But it’s already hot — really hot — in Texas and other parts of the southern United States. And that leads to an obvious question: If the global-warming catastrophists are right, and it’s going to get even hotter, then why the heck are we putting up wind turbines that barely work when it’s hot?
— Robert Bryce is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. His fourth book, Power Hungry: The Myths of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future, was recently issued in paperback.
I think the turbine problem will resolve itself. The thieves are going to run out of copper & air conditioners to steal and sell for recycling. the only things left to steal will be the wind turbines.
I can’t sleep well without a floor fan blowing on me all night.
In order to power that fan by wind i believe i would need a slightly bigger fan out in my backyard with wind spinning it at a slightly faster rate than the one inside for 8 hours straight while i sleep.
Ya ok.
Makes sense.
Whats billions and billions of dollars anyways?
You could maybe store the energy in one or many giant spinning flywheel/gyro contraptions.
Yeah, that worked out fine at Taum Sauk.
So buildnatural gasnuclear powered desalinization plants and pipelines to ship the water inland.
And when those reservoirs are filled, use electricity generated fromnatural gasuranium topipe the water to ever deeper inland reservoirspower hydroelectric generation.
Texas isn't always in a drought, but it always gets insanely hot in the summer - and since Texas is drawing people from all over the planet to live and work here, we can't possibly keep up with the growing electricity needs.
lol
i should have read the rest of your post.
Geothermal heat sinking, while capital intensive, is a good way to go.
Because global warming is a myth to control people. It is a way to cripple a country. Fits Marxist doctrine to rot the country from the inside and hamstring us with laws.
Yes. Spinning objects seem to work well with AC power. Wonder how big they would have to be? Windmills are pretty big.
Cooling can be contained aka closed loop systems with multiple enclosed cisterns etc for thorium units. I see your concerns yet most that use such are very old designs.
I think it can be done.
Another thing to consider is new building codes that require extensive insulation efforts. My homes shell is double stud wall construction with expanding foam insulation. Titanium white metal roof with large overhangs / eaves an front an back porches.
Windows are pella triple pane an storm windows etc are triple pane with a UV thermal reflective tinting film.
Solar roof vents an fans as well.
My HVAC is a deep well system that keeps the home about 70 degrees so far this summer. It was / is a hot summer here in the panhandle of Texas. Insulation makes a difference that pays off ....
Rolling brownouts still get me but if power goes out at 2PM in 100 degree heat the house will stay comfortable the rest of the day. Sort of like living in a Coleman cooler inside a Coleman cooler.....:o)
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Long-time lurker here. Im a newly retired clean energy entrepreneur (just sold my company to a foreign conglomerate) Im glad to see this posted Bryce is a recovering duck-scrubber that has been a great voice in the wilderness about the wind farm scam check out some of his videos on youtube.
Several comments to add to the conversation:
1) the graphs purpose is to show that wind power is out of phase with demand and, thus, cannot be considered a load resource what this means is that the investment is essentially wasted because demand growth must be met with nuclear or fossil fuel plants (mostly Natgas these days).
2) regarding how this happens in Texas? (Im from Austin area) its pretty simple. The 29 states that require some percentage of the energy be renewable and the other areas (cities) create a market for a renewable energy credit [REC] a unit of wind power creates a REC that gets sold to the power providers and gets bolted on to a coal-fired unit and magically, the coal power is now green. Obviously, its just a government-sponsored scam.
Storage (of any sort) appears to be a long, long way off. Solar is the fuel of tomorrow — and always will be.
You have to remember that to Al Gore that is not a lie. He probably believes it. He probably believes that some time during his marriage he actually made Tipoper have an orgasm.
Interesting... What can you reveal about the company and its "clean energy" methodology?
Idiots at all levels.
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