Near-surface winds could provide more than 20 times today's global
power demand: Rich Murray 2012.09.09

http://phys.org/news/2012-09-power-global-energy-demand.html#jCp

Enough wind to power global energy demand, new research says
September 9, 2012
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A Vestas wind turbine. Image credit: Vestas

There is enough energy available in winds to meet all of the world's demand.
Atmospheric turbines that convert steadier and faster high-altitude
winds into energy could generate even more power than ground- and
ocean-based units.
New research from Carnegie's Ken Caldeira examines the limits of the
amount of power that could be harvested from winds, as well as the
effects high-altitude wind power could have on the climate as a whole.
Their work is published September 9 by Nature Climate Change.

Led by Kate Marvel of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who
began this research at Carnegie, the team used models to quantify the
amount of power that could be generated from both surface and
atmospheric winds.

Surface winds were defined as those that can be accessed by turbines
supported by towers on land or rising out of the sea.
High-altitude winds were defined as those that can be accessed by
technology merging turbines and kites.

The study looked only at the geophysical limitations of these
techniques, not technical or economic factors.

Turbines create drag, or resistance, which removes momentum from the
winds and tends to slow them.
As the number of wind turbines increase, the amount of energy that is
extracted increases.
But at some point, the winds would be slowed so much that adding more
turbines will not generate more electricity.
This study focused on finding the point at which energy extraction is highest.

Using models, the team was able to determine that more than 400
terrawatts of power could be extracted from surface winds and more
than 1,800 terrawatts could be generated by winds extracted throughout
the atmosphere.

Today, civilization uses about 18 TW of power.
Near-surface winds could provide more than 20 times today's global
power demand and wind turbines on kites could potentially capture 100
times the current global power demand.

At maximum levels of power extraction, there would be substantial
climate effects to wind harvesting.
But the study found that the climate effects of extracting wind energy
at the level of current global demand would be small, as long as the
turbines were spread out and not clustered in just a few regions.

At the level of global energy demand, wind turbines might affect
surface temperatures by about 0.1 degree Celsius and affect
precipitation by about 1%.
Overall, the environmental impacts would not be substantial.
"Looking at the big picture, it is more likely that economic,
technological or political factors will determine the growth of wind
power around the world, rather than geophysical limitations," Caldeira
said.

Journal reference: Nature Climate Change
Provided by Carnegie Institution for Science

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-09-power-global-energy-demand.html#jCp

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