Title: Wind Energy
1Wind Energy
- Stephen R. Lawrence
- Leeds School of Business
- University of Colorado
- Boulder, CO
2Acknowledgement
Adapted from a presentation by Keith
Stockton Environmental Studies University of
Colorado Boulder, CO
3Ancient Resource Meets 21st Century
4Wind TurbinesPower for a House or City
5Wind Energy Outline
- History and Context
- Advantages
- Design
- Siting
- Disadvantages
- Economics
- Project Development
- Policy
- Future
6History and Context
7Wind Energy History
- 1 A.D.
- Hero of Alexandria uses a wind machine to power
an organ - 400 A.D.
- Wind driven Buddhist prayer wheels
- 1200 to 1850
- Golden era of windmills in western Europe
50,000 - 9,000 in Holland 10,000 in England 18,000 in
Germany - 1850s
- Multiblade turbines for water pumping made and
marketed in U.S. - 1882
- Thomas Edison commissions first commercial
electric generating stations in NYC and London - 1900
- Competition from alternative energy sources
reduces windmill population to fewer than 10,000 - 1850 1930
- Heyday of the small multiblade turbines in the US
midwast - As many as 6,000,000 units installed
- 1936
- US Rural Electrification Administration extends
the grid to most formerly isolated rural sites - Grid electricity rapidly displaces multiblade
turbine uses
8Increasingly Significant Power Source
Wind could generate 6 of nations electricity by
2020.
Wind currently produces less than 1 of the
nations power. Source Energy Information Agency
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10Manufacturing Market Share
Source American Wind Energy Association
11US Wind Energy Capacity
12Installed Wind Turbines
13Colorado Wind Energy Projects
14New Projects in Colorado
15Ponnequin 30 MW
- Operate with wind speeds between 7-55 mph
- Originally part of voluntary wind signup program
- Total of 44 turbines
- In 2001, 15 turbines added
- 1 MW serves 300 customers
- 1 million dollars each
- 750 KW of electricity each turbine
- Construction began Dec 98
- Date online total June 1999
- Hub height 181 ft
- Blade diameter 159 ft
- Land used for buffalo grazing
16Wind Power Advantages
17Advantages of Wind Power
- Environmental
- Economic Development
- Fuel Diversity Conservation
- Cost Stability
18Environmental Benefits
- No air pollution
- No greenhouse gasses
- Does not pollute water with mercury
- No water needed for operations
19Pollution from Electric Power
Source Northwest Foundation, 12/97
Electric power is a primary source of industrial
air pollution
20Economic Development Benefits
- Expanding Wind Power development brings jobs to
rural communities - Increased tax revenue
- Purchase of goods services
21Economic Development Example
Case Study Lake Benton, MN 2,000 per 750-kW
turbine in revenue to farmers Up to 150
construction, 28 ongoing OM jobs Added 700,000
to local tax base
22Fuel Diversity Benefits
- Domestic energy source
- Inexhaustible supply
- Small, dispersed design
- reduces supply risk
23Cost Stability Benefits
- Flat-rate pricing
- hedge against fuel price volatility risk
- Wind electricity is inflation-proof
24Wind Power Design
25Power in the Wind (W/m2)
Density P/(RxT) P - pressure (Pa) R -
specific gas constant (287 J/kgK) T - air
temperature (K)
Area ? r2
Instantaneous Speed (not mean speed)
kg/m3
m2
m/s
26Wind Energy Natural Characteristics
- Wind Speed
- Wind energy increases with the cube of the wind
speed - 10 increase in wind speed translates into 30
more electricity - 2X the wind speed translates into 8X the
electricity - Height
- Wind energy increases with height to the 1/7
power - 2X the height translates into 10.4 more
electricity
27Wind Energy Natural Characteristics
- Air density
- Wind energy increases proportionally with air
density - Humid climates have greater air density than dry
climates - Lower elevations have greater air density than
higher elevations - Wind energy in Denver about 6 less than at sea
level - Blade swept area
- Wind energy increases proportionally with swept
area of the blades - Blades are shaped like airplane wings
- 10 increase in swept diameter translates into
21 greater swept area - Longest blades up to 413 feet in diameter
- Resulting in 600 foot total height
28Betz Limit
- Theoretical maximum energy extraction from wind
16/27 59.3 - Undisturbed wind velocity reduced by 1/3
- Albert Betz (1928)
29How Big is a 2.0 MW Wind Turbine?
This picture shows a Vestas V-80 2.0-MW wind
turbine superimposed on a Boeing 747 JUMBO JET
30Wind Turbine Power Curve
Vestas V80 2 MW Wind Turbine
KW
50
40
30
20
10
MPH
31Recent Capacity Enhancements
2006 5 MW 600
32Nacelle Components
10
5
16
17
12
12
- Hub controller 11. Blade bearing
- Pitch cylinder 12. Blade
- Main shaft 13. Rotor lock system
- Oil cooler 14. Hydraulic unit
- Gearbox 15. Machine foundation
- Top Controller 16. Yaw gears
- Parking Break 17. Generator
- Service crane 18. Ultra-sonic sensors
- Transformer 19. Meteorological gauges
- Blade Hub
33Turbines Constantly Improving
- Larger turbines
- Specialized blade design
- Power electronics
- Computer modeling
- produces more efficient design
- Manufacturing improvements
34Improving Reliability
- Drastic improvements since mid-80s
- Manufacturers report availability data of over 95
35Wind Project Siting
36Wind Power Classes
Wind PowerClass 10 m (33 ft) 10 m (33 ft) 50 m (164 ft) 50 m (164 ft)
Wind PowerClass Speed m/s (mph) Speed m/s (mph)
1 0 0
1 4.4 (9.8) 5.6 (12.5)
2 4.4 (9.8) 5.6 (12.5)
2 5.1 (11.5) 6.4 (14.3)
3 5.1 (11.5) 6.4 (14.3)
3 5.6 (12.5) 7.0 (15.7)
4 5.6 (12.5) 7.0 (15.7)
4 6.0 (13.4) 7.5 (16.8)
5 6.0 (13.4) 7.5 (16.8)
5 6.4 (14.3) 8.0 (17.9)
6 6.4 (14.3) 8.0 (17.9)
6 7.0 (15.7) 8.8 (19.7)
7 7.0 (15.7) 8.8 (19.7)
7 9.4 (21.1) 11.9 (26.6)
Wind speed is for standard sea-level conditions.
To maintain the same power density, speed
increases 3/1000 m (5/5000 ft) elevation.
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39Siting a Wind Farm
- Winds
- Minimum class 4 desired for utility-scale wind
farm (gt7 m/s at hub height) - Transmission
- Distance, voltage excess capacity
- Permit approval
- Land-use compatibility
- Public acceptance
- Visual, noise, and bird impacts are biggest
concern - Land area
- Economies of scale in construction
- Number of landowners
40Wind Disadvantages
41Market Barriers
- Siting
- Avian
- Noise
- Aesthetics
- Intermittent source of power
- Transmission constraints
- Operational characteristics different from
conventional fuel sources - Financing
42Wind Energy and the Grid
- Pros
- Small project size
- Short/flexible development time
- Dispatchability
- Cons
- Generally remote location
- Grid connectivity -- lack of transmission
capability - Intermittent output
- Only When the wind blows (night? Day?)
- Low capacity factor
- Predicting the wind -- were getting better
43Birds - A Serious Obstacle
- Birds of Prey (hawks, owls, golden eagles) in
jeopardy - Altamont Pass News Update from Sept 22
- shut down all the turbines for at least two
months each winter - eliminate the 100 most lethal turbines
- Replace all before permits expire in 13 years
44Wind Characteristics Consequences
- Remote location and low capacity factor
- Higher transmission investment per unit output
- Small project size and quick development time
- Planning mismatch with transmission investment
- Intermittent output
- Higher system operating costs if systems and
protocols not designed properly
45Balancing Supply Demand
4500
Gas
4000
Gas/Hydro
3500
Base Load Coal
3000
46Energy Delivery
47Energy Delivery
48Wind Economics
49Wind Farm Design Economics
- Key Design Parameters
- Mean wind speed at hub height
- Capacity factor
- Start with 100
- Subtract time when wind speed less than optimum
- Subtract time due to scheduled maintenance
- Subtract time due to unscheduled maintenance
- Subtract production losses
- Dirty blades, shut down due to high winds
- Typically 33 at a Class 4 wind site
50Wind Farm Financing
- Financing Terms
- Interest rate
- LIBOR 150 basis points
- Loan term
- Up to 15 years
51Cost of Energy Components
- Cost (/kWh) (Capital Recovery Cost OM) /
kWh/year - Capital Recovery Debt and Equity Cost
- OM Cost Turbine design, operating environment
- kWh/year Wind Resource
52Costs Nosedive ? Winds Success
38 cents/kWh
3.5-5.0 cents/kWh
Levelized cost at good wind sites in nominal
dollars, not including tax credit
53Construction Cost Elements
54Wind Farm Cost Components
55Wind Farm Economics
- Capacity factor
- Start with 100
- Subtract time when wind speed lt optimum
- Subtract time due to scheduled maintenance
- Subtract time due to unscheduled maintenance
- Subtract production losses
- Dirty blades, shut down due to high winds
- Typically 33 at a Class 4 wind site
56Improved Capacity Factor
- Performance Improvements due to
- Better siting
- Larger turbines/energy capture
- Technology Advances
- Higher reliability
- Capacity factors gt 35 at good sites
- Examples (Year 2000)
- Big Spring, Texas
- 37 CF in first 9 months
- Springview, Nebraska
- 36 CF in first 9 months
57Wind Farm Economics
- Key parameter
- Distance from grid interconnect
- 350,000/mile for overhead transmission lines
58Wind Farm Economics
- Example
- 200 MW wind farm
- Fixed costs - 1.23M/MW
- Class 4 wind site
- 33 capacity factor
- 10 miles to grid
- 6/15 year financing
- 100 financed
- 20 year project life
- Determine Cost of Energy - COE
59Wind Farm Economics
- Total Capital Costs
- 246M (10 x 350K) 249.5M
- Total Annual Energy Production
- 200 MW x 1000 x 365 x 24 x 0.33 578,160,000 kWh
- Total Energy Production
- 578,160,000 x 20 11,563,200,000 kWh
- Capital Costs/kWh
- 3.3/kWh
- Operating Costs/kWh
- 1.6/kWh
- Cost of Energy New Facilities
- Wind 4.9/kWh
- Coal 3.7/kWh
- Natural gas 7.0/kWh
- _at_ 12/MMBtu
60Wind Farm Development
61Wind Farm Development
- Key parameters
- Wind resource
- Zoning/Public Approval/Land Lease
- Power purchase agreements
- Connectivity to the grid
- Financing
- Tax incentives
62Wind Farm Development
- Wind resource
- Absolutely vital to determine finances
- Wind is the fuel
- Requires historical wind data
- Daily and hourly detail
- Install metrological towers
- Preferably at projected turbine hub height
- Multiple towers across proposed site
- Multiyear data reduces financial risk
- Correlate long term offsite data to support short
term onsite data - Local NWS metrological station
63Wind Energy Variability
Source Garrad Hassan America, Inc.
64Wind Farm Development
- Zoning/Public Approval/Land Lease
- Obtain local and state governmental approvals
- Often includes Environmental Impact Studies
- Impact to wetlands, birds (especially raptors)
- NIMBY component
- View sheds
- Negotiate lease arrangements with ranchers,
farmers, Native American tribes, etc. - Annual payments per turbine or production based
65Wind Farm Development
- Power Purchase Agreements (PPA)
- Must have upfront financial commitment from
utility - 15 to 20 year time frames
- Utility agrees to purchase wind energy at a set
rate - e.g. 4.3/kWh
- Financial stability/credit rating of utility
important aspect of obtaining wind farm financing - PPA only as good as the creditworthiness of the
uitility - Utility goes bankrupt youre in trouble
66Wind Farm Development
- Connectivity to the grid
- Obtain approvals to tie to the grid
- Obtain from grid operators WAPA, BPA,
California ISO - Power fluctuations stress the grid
- Especially since the grid is operating near max
capacity
67Wind Farm Development
- Financing
- Once all components are settled
- Wind resource
- Zoning/Public Approval/Land Lease
- Power Purchase Agreements (PPA)
- Connectivity to the grid
- Turbine procurement
- Construction costs
- Take the deal to get financed
68Financing Revenue Components
Source Hogan Hartson, LLP
69Closing the Deal
- Small developers utilize a partnership flip
- Put the deal together
- Sell it to a large wind owner
- e.g. Florida Power Light, AEP, Shell Wind
Energy, PPM Scottish Power - Shell and PPM jointly own Lamar wind farm
- Large wind owner assumes ownership and builds the
wind farm
70Wind Policy
71Wind Farm Economics
- Federal government subsidizes wind farm
development in three ways - 1.9 /kWh production tax credit
- 33.5 subsidy
- 5 year depreciation schedule
- 29.8 subsidy
- Depreciation bonus
- 2.6 subsidy
72Tax Incentives Issues
- Small developers cant fully use federal tax
credits or accelerated depreciation - They dont have a sufficient tax liability
- Example
- A 200 MW wind farm can generate a 12.6M tax
credit/year - Small developers dont have sufficient access to
credit to finance a 200M project
73Production Tax Credit
- 1.9/kWh Production Tax Credit
- First 10 years for producing wind generated
electricity - Wind farm must be producing by 12/31/07
- PTC has been on again/off again since 1992
- Results in inconsistent wind farm development
- PTC in place aggressive development
- PTC lapses little or no development
- The PTC puts wind energy on par with coal and
significantly less than natural gas - When natural gas gt 8.00/MMBtu
- Current prices 10 15/MMBtu
74Wind Power Policy
- Renewable Portfolio Standard
- 21 States have them
- Colorados Amendment 37
- Passed by voters November 2004
- 3 of generation from 2007 - 2010
- 5 of generation from 2011 - 2014
- 10 of generation by 2015 and beyond
- 4 of renewable generation from solar PV
- 96 of renewable generation from wind, small
hydro and biomass - Small utilities can opt out of program
75Renewable Energy Credits
- You subsidize wind energy when produced by
another utility - CU pays 0.006/kWh to Community Energy
- To power the UMC, Wardenburg and the Recreation
Center - Community Energy uses these funds to subsidize
wind energy at wind farms in Lamar and in the
upper Midwest - Although CU isnt getting the electrons from
these wind farms, it is in effect buying wind
energy - The three new buildings (Business, Law, and
Atlas) will also be powered by wind energy
76Inconsistent Policy ? Unstable Markets
Source American Wind Energy Association
77Future Trends
78Expectations for Future Growth
- 20,000 total turbines installed by 2010
- 6 of electricity supply by 2020
100,000 MW of wind power installed by 2020
79Future Cost Reductions
- Financing Strategies
- Manufacturing Economy of Scale
- Better Sites and Tuning Turbines for Site
Conditions - Technology Improvements
80Future Tech Developments
- Application Specific Turbines
- Offshore
- Limited land/resource areas
- Transportation or construction limitations
- Low wind resource
- Cold climates
81The Future of Wind - Offshore
- 1.5 - 6 MW per turbine
- 60-120 m hub height
- 5 km from shore, 30 m deep ideal
- Gravity foundation, pole, or tripod formation
- Shaft can act as artificial reef
- Drawbacks- TD losses (underground cables lead to
shore) and visual eye sore
82Wind Energy Storage
- Pumped hydroelectric
- Georgetown facility Completed 1967
- Two reservoirs separated by 1000 vertical feet
- Pump water uphill at night or when wind energy
production exceeds demand - Flow water downhill through hydroelectric
turbines during the day or when wind energy
production is less than demand - About 70 - 80 round trip efficiency
- Raises cost of wind energy by 25
- Difficult to find, obtain government approval and
build new facilities - Compressed Air Energy Storage
- Using wind power to compress air in underground
storage caverns - Salt domes, empty natural gas reservoirs
- Costly, inefficient
- Hydrogen storage
- Use wind power to electrolyze water into hydrogen
- Store hydrogen for use later in fuel cells
- 50 losses in energy from wind to hydrogen and
hydrogen to electricity - 25 round trip efficiency
- Raises cost of wind energy by 4X
83U.S. Wind Energy Challenges
- Best wind sites distant from
- population centers
- major grid connections
- Wind variability
- Can mitigate if forecasting improves
- Non-firm power
- Debate on how much backup generation is required
- NIMBY component
- Cape Wind project met with strong resistance by
Cape Cod residents - Limited offshore sites
- Sea floor drops off rapidly on east and west
coasts - North Sea essentially a large lake
- Intermittent federal tax incentives
84Nantucket Project
130 turbines proposed for Nantucket Sound
85Hawaiian Wind Farm Shock Absorber
- Install on 2.4 MW wind farm on Big Island of
Hawaii - Utilizes superconducting materials to store DC
power - Suddenly increased and decreased wind power
output - Likely to loose efficiency due to AC-DC-AC
conversions
"Utility Scale Wind on Islands," Refocus, Jul/Aug
2003, http//www.re-focus.net
86Where Can Coloradans Buy Wind?
87Oceanic Energy