30 August, 2023
By
Kevin Killough
As Spent Turbine Blades Pile Up All
Over The U.S., Wyoming Seeks Solutions
Wyoming is paying attention to a growing
problem of wind turbine blade disposal. A mechanical engineer with
experience in the wind industry said the blades are so hard, it’s
going to be difficult to do much with them.
A town in Texas is seeing firsthand the waste stream problem created
by spent wind turbine blades. It’s a problem Wyoming has been
considering for years, with various proposals to address the issue.
While some companies say they hope to repurpose the material for
things like concrete, nothing has yet materialized.
Mike Gill, a mechanical engineer who worked in the turbine
manufacturing industry, told Cowboy State Daily the material is so
hard that repurposing is unlikely to be economical anytime soon.
“It’s a waste of time,” he said.
Piling Up
Texas Monthly magazine reported last
week that Sweetwater, Texas, has become inundated with blades.
Washington-based Global Fiberglass Solutions is trying to create a
successful business recycling the blades. The plan is to grind them up
to use as material for things like pallets, railroad ties and flooring
panels.
The company began stockpiling used blades in the town at a couple
locations. It also has collected huge piles of blades in towns in
Iowa.
According to Texas Monthly, the company’s plant in Sweetwater has only
recycled some of the blades, though a spokesperson assured the
magazine it plans to ramp up production soon.
Repowering Waste
Part of the reason the blades are piling up is because federal tax
credits not only go to the first 10 years of a wind farm’s operations,
but the companies can also restart that time period by “repowering”
turbines.
Rocky Mountain Power, which is seeking
two rate increases that combined will total over 30%, told
Cowboy State Daily in April that its buildout of wind
resources prevented an even higher rate increase by saving over $80
million.
This figure included production tax credits it wouldn’t have received
were it not building new wind farms and repowered others.
As wind farm owners rush to reset the 10-year timer on their tax
credits, repowered wind turbines are shedding blades like autumn
leaves.
According to one 2017 study, the global wind industry will
produce 43 million tons of blade waste by 2050 — the
equivalent of 215,000 locomotives, and up to 800,000 tons annually.
The U.S. and Europe will account for 41% of that.
Mine
Reclamation
State Sen. Eric Barlow, R-Gillette, sponsored a couple bills when he
was in the Wyoming House that allow for wind turbine blades to be used
in mine reclamation projects.
In 2020, he sponsored
a bill that allows wind companies to pay coal companies for
blade disposal in the course of coal mine reclamation projects. The
state sent a rule package to the U.S. Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement in August 2021. The plan has remained with
the agency since.
In 2022, he sponsored another bill that was signed into law allowing
for the use of “inert material” to be used in reclamation of non-coal
mining sites.
Since wind turbine blades have nothing that can leach into groundwater
or cause other environmental problems, they would fall under the
category.
Taxpayers’ Expense
Both of the bills were the result of photos from a Casper landfill,
which had accepted piles of blades for disposal. It was one of the
first photos showing the huge amount of space the blades take up.
Barlow told Cowboy State Daily that more should be done to ensure this
doesn’t become an unmanageable problem down the road.
“My concern is I don’t want to fill up landfills with industrial waste
at taxpayers’ expense,” Barlow said.
He said that the Wyoming Legislature might look at making blade
disposal plans part of the industrial siting process for wind farms.
Wind projects of 20 towers or more are required to get a permit from
the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council.
Barlow said that hydraulic fracturing operations are required as part
of their permitting process to have a plan for disposal of their
produced water, which is a byproduct of oil and gas operations. So, it
should be no different for wind or solar farms.
Ground-Up Blades
Global Fiberglass Solutions isn’t the only company looking to use
ground-up blades for materials.
Don Sylvester, CFO for Texas-based Xproducts U.S. LLC, wants to use
the stuff for paving materials. One of the problems getting wind
companies on board, Sylvester told Cowboy State Daily, is the cost of
transporting the blades from wind farms, which are all over the place,
to a central recycling facility.
When he saw the photos of the blades at the Casper landfill, he got to
thinking that problem may already be addressed.
He said Xproducts has 20 landfills interested in the company’s
process.
“They would actually like to see if it makes sense for them to start
emptying them,” Sylvester said.
Sylvester said that some states are considering legislation to require
agencies to use ground-up blades as paving material before buying
standard materials. Companies looking to raise their environmental,
social and governance (ESG) scores, or earn money for carbon credits,
may increase interest in these programs.
Like
A Banana
Mike Gill, a mechanical engineer who worked in the turbine
manufacturing industry, has some doubts about it.
He told Cowboy State Daily that Sweetwater, Texas, became the dumping
ground for the blades because it had no oil and gas industry, but had
a lot of wind farms. It’s where he learned to climb towers.
“You can go out there and see all these wind turbines. They’re
beautiful. They really are,” he said.
The problem is the turbines last 15 or 20 years. Sometimes the blades
last even less, such as when they get struck by lightning.
“It will split them like a banana,” he said.
The towers have lightning rods to prevent that, but it’s not a 100%
guarantee with a tower rising hundreds of feet of the plain, Gill
said.
Hard
As Diamonds
Recycling the blades, however, is a real challenge. He said the
primary reason is that they’re 60 layers of woven fiberglass held
together with epoxy.
Before he went into the wind industry, he was engineering in the
automotive industry where he worked on the Chevrolet Corvette. The
fiberglass body on it was three layers thick.
At one point, he was doing research for the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency, which wanted to see how well the blades would work as
bullet armor. Gill’s team had to cut turbine blades down to fire 25
caliber bullets into them. They used diamond-blade tips.
“The blade lasted one cut,” he said.
These blades were a little more than a half-inch thick, but the 60-ply
blades are even thicker. As far as recycling that material into new
blades, Gill said it “ain’t ever going to happen.”
Using the ground up material makes a bit more sense, he said. But it
still has one problem, even if they can grind it down into usable
sizes.
“The aggregate they put in concrete is only $1 per pound,” he said.
Kevin
Killough can be reached at Kevin@cowboystatedaily.com.
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