Wind
Wind
Wind
Wind Basics
Wind is simply air in motion. It is caused How Uneven Heating of Water and Land
Causes Wind
by the uneven heating of the Earth's
surface by the sun. Because the Earth's
surface is made of very different types of
land and water, it absorbs the sun's heat
at different rates.
In the same way, the atmospheric winds that circle the earth are created because
the land near the Earth's equator is heated more by the sun than the land near the
North and South Poles.
Like old fashioned windmills, today’s wind machines (also called wind turbines)
use blades to collect the wind’s kinetic energy. The wind flows over the blades
creating lift, like the effect on airplane wings, which causes them to turn. The
blades are connected to a drive shaft that turns an electric generator to produce
electricity.
With the new wind machines, there is still the problem of what to do when the
wind isn't blowing. At those times, other types of power plants must be used to
make electricity.
Wind Production
New technologies have decreased the cost of producing electricity from wind,
and growth in wind power has been encouraged by tax breaks for renewable
energy and green pricing programs. Many utilities around the country offer green
pricing options that allow customers the choice to pay more for electricity that
comes from renewable sources to support new technologies.
Fortunately, these seasonal variations are a good match for the electricity
demands of the regions. In California, people use more electricity during the
summer for air conditioners. In Montana, people use more electricity during the
winter for heating.
Most of the wind power plants in the world Wind Turbines in the Ocean
Conditions are well suited along much of the coasts of the United States to use
wind energy. However, there are people oppose putting turbines just offshore,
near the coastlines. People think the wind turbines will spoil the view of the
ocean. Right now, there is a plan to build an offshore wind plant off the coast of
Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Wind is a renewable energy source that does not pollute, so some people see it
as a good alternative to fossil fuels.
There are two types of wind machines (turbines) used today, based on the
direction of the rotating shaft (axis): horizontal-axis wind machines and
vertical-axis wind machines. The size of wind machines varies widely. Small
turbines used to power a single home or business may have a capacity of less
than 100 kilowatts. Some large commercial-sized turbines may have a capacity of
5 million watts, or 5 megawatts. Larger turbines are often grouped together into
wind farms that provide power to the electrical grid.
Horizontal-axis Turbines Look Like Windmills
Most wind machines being used today are the horizontal-axis type.
Horizontal-axis wind machines have blades like airplane propellers. A typical
horizontal wind machine stands as tall as a 20-story building and has three blades
that span 200 feet across. The largest wind machines in the world have blades
longer than a football field. Wind machines stand tall and wide to capture more
wind.
Vertical-axis wind machines have blades that go from top to bottom. The most
common type — the Darrieus wind turbine, named after the French engineer
Georges Darrieus who patented the design in 1931 — looks like a giant,
two-bladed egg beater. This type of vertical wind machine typically stands 100
feet tall and 50 feet wide. Vertical-axis wind machines make up only a very small
share of the wind machines used today.
Wind power plants, or wind farms, as they are sometimes called, are clusters of
wind machines used to produce electricity. A wind farm usually has dozens of
wind machines scattered over a large area. The world's largest wind farm, the
Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center in Texas, has 421 wind turbines that generate
enough electricity to power 220,000 homes per year.
Many wind plants are not owned by public utility companies. Instead, they are
owned and operated by business people who sell the electricity produced on the
wind farm to electric utilities. These private companies are known as Independent
Power Producers.
American colonists used windmills to grind wheat and corn, to pump water, and
to cut wood at sawmills. As late as the 1920s, Americans used small windmills to
generate electricity in rural areas without electric service. When power lines began
to transport electricity to rural areas in the 1930s, local windmills were used less
and less, though they can still be seen on some Western ranches.
The oil shortages of the 1970s changed the energy picture for the Country and
the world. It created an interest in alternative energy sources, paving the way for
the re-entry of the windmill to generate electricity. In the early 1980s, wind energy
really took off in California, partly because of State policies that encouraged
renewable energy sources.