Wind Farms
A wind farm is basically a group of wind turbines in close proximity
under the control of one person or company. The top country in the
world generating the most wind energy is Germany and the United
States is in second place.
Wind farms, according to Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens and
others, will soon become part of the landscape in the Midwest from
the North Texas region up to North Dakota. This "Saudi Arabia
of Wind" already has contracts with General Electric and others
to produce multiple wind turbines in multiple locations.
According to the American Wind Energy Association, the top 10 wind
energy producing states by ranking are:
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1. Texas
2. Iowa
3. California
4. Minnesota
5. Washington
6. Colorado
7. Oregon
8. Illinois
9. New York
10. Oklahoma |
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Wind farms typically come in one of three varieties including onshore,
near shore and offshore. Onshore wind farms as the name implies
can be any group of turbine constructed from the Rocky Mountains
to Great Plains up to a few miles from the coastline.
Near shore wind farms are turbines that reside two miles from shore
up to five miles out to sea. Because of the convection of air heating
over land and sea, near shore wind turbines typically fair well.
Offshore wind farms are typically any installation five miles or
more out to sea. Onshore and near shore wind farms typically receive
more resistance from homeowners and environmentalists because of
view disruption and migratory bird issues.
Offshore wind farms are more "out of sight, out of mind"
so they commonly do not receive the same criticism. Offshore wind
farms, however, are usually more costly to build, transport and
construct than other turbines.
For wind farms to deliver electricity in a cost effective manner
they need to be built in close proximity to power transmission lines
or substations. A minimum of 10 mph constant wind is needed for
many utility scale turbines to be viable, though research and development
and now bringing down this figure.
Locations for wind farms need to be scouted with wind maps and
studied for up to two years in order to test if a location is viable.
Many times meteorological towers are constructed on potential wind
farm sites and data collected for months until and assessment can
be made about the robustness of the location.
Higher altitudes generally mean higher wind speeds due to less
drag and lower air viscosity. Mountainous regions including ridgelines
offer increase in wind speed due to topographical acceleration properties.
Wind turbines have been around for over 2,000 years and producing
electricity for over the past 100 years. And, since wind power is
the fastest growing segment of alternative energy in the U. S.,
wind farms will be here to stay for many generations to come.
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