What Is Wind Power Generation

What Is Wind Power Generation Image
Harnessing the wind for man's use was the third form of energy mankind controlled, after fire, and animal power. Used for sailing ships since ancient times, and windmills to grind grain and pump water since the Renaissance, WIND POWER GENERATION has been with us for centuries, and has the potential to help our modern society reduce its fossil fuel consumption.

WIND POWER FACTS


Modern wind power generators don't grind grain or run pumps; they're turbines that generate electricity that's stored in battery units or used directly. Using modern construction techniques, modern wind power turbine blades are made of lightweight materials so they can turn freely as they catch the wind; a set of reduction gears takes the angular momentum of the turning blades and spins a small electrical generator inside the housing; the power is either stored in a battery for local use (for a home based wind generator) or put directly into the electrical grid.

At current prices, wind power is still more expensive per kilowatt-hour generated from coal, at least until the costs of pollution and CO2 remediation is factored in. Once those factors are put into place, it becomes a bit more competitive, but is still a marginal case. Most homeowners who install private wind power generators do so to have a public display of their environmental "green-ness", and to trim down their electrical bills.

EQUIPMENT AND LOCATION


The archetypal image of wind power generation is a tower with a three bladed "fan" rotating on the end of it - they're called wind turbines. These tall towers (as tall as 50 feet high in some areas) use both active and computer guidance to have the blades of the fan facing the incoming wind; some also have solar generation plants. They're usually painted haze gray so that they'll blend in with the sky, though even this causes some communities to vote against them as eyesores.

The "Not In My Back Yard!" attitude has driven a lot of innovation in the wind power market, including moving them out of marked migratory paths, and into offshore locations, where they're often tied with tidal bed generators. Moving wind power sites offshore lets them use the generally stronger ocean winds to move them, but also causes problems with wear and tear due to the effects of salt water and constant battering by waves on the pilings at the base of the tower.

RURAL USE OF WIND POWER


The other effect of the "NIMBY" attitude mentioned above is that rural areas are the dominant users of wind power - particularly in the Great Plains and mountain west, where a lot of no longer viable ranching land is available, there's plenty of room to put up forests of wind power turbines, and they can usually be made shorter, particularly in locales with strong wind.

Some of the older wind power generators used in rural areas actually bring to mind the windmills used to dry out the Zuider Zee in the Netherlands, and are used to draw groundwater from deep underground. Most were built to generate electricity in the Australian farm country, where getting conventionally supplied electricity to rural stations was almost impossible. These designs were then imported to the United States where they've made a deep impact.

As the social pressure for more "green" power sources grows, the demand for wind power generation is rising - and with it, hopes that the installation cost will drop. It's still the costliest form of commercially viable power sold to the grid, and is something of a "boutique" power source. Even so, it's a great way to add extra generating capacity to rural areas, and is affordable for home owners to install.