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Storing Wind Generated Power

Posted by skagit_goat_man_ WA (My Page) on
Thu, Aug 9, 07 at 10:10

The July 28 issue of The Economist has two articles on wind generated power and how to store it. A promising system is to build a wind generated compresor system and store the compressed air in underground caverns. When the power is needed the compressed air is used to run the generators. A site in Iowa is expected to be completed by 2011. There are two compressed air facilities, one in the US and one in Germany. But the compressors are run by electricity. When the rates are very low they store compressed air in caverns and when the price is high they use the air to run generators. In Norway the plan is to use the wind generated power to run pumps to move water up behind dams that will generate power.

I'm sure there are problems with each type of system but the point is that human inginuity is bringing alternate power sources into the main stream. One big problem with wind power is that the wind doesn't blow everywhere and too much power would be lost in transmission. But apparently that's a problem with AC but not DC. Norway is building a DC power grid between Scandinavia, the Netherlands and Germany. An Irish is looking a construct a DC grid between North and Baltic Seas wind farms and southern Europe. So the next time someone tells you why wind power just won't work now you can respond with the reasons it will work. Here's a link for the main article. For the sidebox search on the economist for "trapped wind" Tom

Here is a link that might be useful: Where the Wind Blows


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Storing Wind Generated Power

I thought it was just the opposite: it's AC that can be effectively sent over long-transmission lines, and DC can't. That's why Edison's first systems weren't useful, and Tesla came up with AC which solved the problem. Solar panels produce DC which can be inverted to AC, though at some loss of energy of course. I don't know that much about wind turbines, but can't they spin units that produce AC? Generators produce DC and alternators produce AC, at least for automotive I believe.


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RE: Storing Wind Generated Power

pn, here's the link to the article. Tom

Here is a link that might be useful: Where The Wind Blows


 
 

 

 


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