22 September 2023
BY U.S. Department of Energy
80% More U.S. Wind Energy Potential
This Decade From Tech Innovation
Wind turbines have been increasing in tower (or
hub) height (from 30 meters [m] to 90 m) and rotor diameter (from 30 m
to 125 m) from the 1990s to the 2020s, with power capacity also
growing from 0.2 megawatts (MW) to 3 MW. Near-commercial innovations
can produce turbines with tip heights taller than the top of the
Washington Monument (169 m tall) when a rotor with a 150-m diameter is
attached to a 160-m tower. Graphic by Josh Bauer, NREL.
In a recent National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) study,
researchers found that technology innovations making their way into
commercial markets today and in coming years could unlock 80% more
economically viable wind energy capacity within the contiguous United
States. This could go a long way toward helping the nation meet its
clean energy goals.
Near-Commercial Wind Turbine Innovations Will
Allow for Cost-Effective Wind Power in Additional Regions of the
United States
While the United States has excellent wind
resources over much of the country, some locations are less windy and,
as a result, have not seen much wind energy development. Harnessing
wind power in a cost-effective manner has long been a challenge in
these areas. But new technologies could make it possible to profitably
capture winds blowing higher above the ground across much of the
United States.
A significant portion of this potential wind
energy occurs in regions of the United States with little or no
existing wind farm deployment—the Southeast, Gulf Coast, and parts of
the East Coast. These areas are close to electrical demand centers,
potentially reducing the need for new transmission to deploy wind
energy at the scale needed to meet renewable energy goals.
“These results show an unexpected opportunity to utilize
wind power more extensively in regions where transmission
infrastructure already exists or where incremental transmission could
be built relatively cost effectively,” said Owen Roberts, an NREL
analyst and member of the study, which was funded by the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Wind Energy Technologies Office.
Expanding wind energy to those regions could offer
additional benefits.
“Deploying wind power in these regions would reduce the
need for governments and utilities to import energy from distant areas
to serve local demand and would enable local jobs and local economic
growth from land leases and tax revenues,” Roberts said.
A recent NREL study has revealed that technology innovations could
unlock an additional 80% economically viable wind energy capacity as
soon as 2025. Innovations in wind technology—such as on-site
manufacturing, taller towers, longer blades, and wake steering—could
allow wind power plants (yellow circles on maps) to be deployed in new
areas of the United States (shaded regions in second map) compared
with areas that are viable with current technology (shaded regions in
first map). Graphic by Travis Williams, NREL, using the U.S.
Geological Survey’s U.S. Wind Turbine Database.
Technology Advancements Make This
Possible
Wind energy technology innovations studied by NREL can reduce the cost
of energy at nearly all locations in the contiguous United States and
enable growing access to clean wind energy.
These innovations include:
-
Longer blades. Significantly
longer blades increase energy capture per turbine. Innovations to
blades, like segmenting them, can make it easier to transport them,
lowering turbine installation costs.
-
Taller towers. Stronger
winds exist at higher hub heights, beyond the reach of today’s
typical turbines. An average 17-meter increase in height provides
the additional clearance needed for longer blades to reach those
high-altitude winds.
-
Low-specific-power wind turbines. These
turbines have a larger rotor size relative to generator size. As
bigger rotors catch more wind, they transfer more energy to the
generator and increase the availability of wind power.
-
Advanced tower manufacturing. Novel
manufacturing techniques—such as spiral welding and 3D
printing—enable on-site creation of wind turbine towers, reducing
costs and avoiding transportation constraints.
-
Climbing cranes. As
wind turbine heights increase, cranes that enable more efficient
turbine installation and major component replacements (including
gearboxes, generators, and blades) could lower costs compared to
conventional cranes (such as crawler or mobile cranes). This is
because of higher costs to rent as well as disassemble, reassemble,
and move conventional cranes between turbine sites.
-
Wake steering. Using
controls that tilt or turn the direction a wind turbine faces and
change generator speed, plant operators can redirect (or steer)
individual turbines to avoid impacting downstream turbines. This can
enable existing facilities to achieve
annual energy production gains of 1%–2%.
“Rather than simply continuing to build wind turbines in
already-developed regions of the country, this study shows that we can
expand wind energy into areas of the country where we historically
haven’t seen it,” said NREL researcher Travis Williams, who
participated in the study. “Innovations, especially low-specific power
and taller towers combined with modest cost reductions, could
dramatically increase wind energy’s potential in the United States.”
Work Is Still Needed To Capture This Potential
The study’s results, published in a
technical report titled Exploring the Impact of Near-Term Innovations
on the Technical Potential of Land-Based Wind Energy, reveal an
opportunity for the United States to use wind power more extensively
when meeting renewable energy targets. To realize the full potential
of these technological advancements, more work remains.
For instance, policymakers can play a critical role in reducing other
barriers, such as increasing public knowledge of or experience with
wind energy, utility experience with integrating wind power (which may
not be a consistent supply), workforce capabilities, and developer
experience in regions with new wind energy markets.
“We’re talking about bringing a new industry and new technology to
parts of the United States that have hardly seen wind energy,” Roberts
said. “The more we can show there’s potential, the more people will
understand the opportunity—creating more pathways to meet our national
energy goals.”
Learn more about NREL’s land-based wind energy research. And be sure
to subscribe to NREL’s wind energy newsletter for more news like this.
Article courtesy of NREL.
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