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Page added on June 9, 2014

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When the Wind Doesn’t Blow

When the Wind Doesn’t Blow thumbnail

Every morning after I wake up, I have a routine. The first thing I do, regardless of how sleepy I might still be, is slip on my shoes and run a mile. This erases the fog of sleep and gets me ready for the day. As an aside, I can highly recommend a quick run in the morning for just about everyone. The time commitment is minimal, it’s good for the heart, helps with stress, and it kicks the brain into high gear much faster than a cup of coffee can (which I still have later in the morning).

When I am traveling, I will often use a hotel treadmill, and catch up on the news for a few minutes as I run. But when I am in Hawaii, I run outdoors in all but the worst weather. The town I live in — near the north end of the Big Island — is known for the wind. In fact, the school mascot where my children have attended school for the past five years is “Ka Makani”, which means “the wind” in Hawaiian. There is a 10.6 megawatt (MW) wind farm — Hawi Renewable Development Wind Farm  (shown in the picture above) — 20 miles north of where I live.

While the wind there blows enough to support a wind farm, and more often than not I have to run against it during some part of my run, on some mornings everything is dead still. On those mornings, I know I can look to the west and see black smoke rising into the sky.

The average capacity factor — that is the percentage of time that an electricity-producing asset is actually producing maximum power — is about 40 percent for wind power in the US. The Hawi Renewable Development Wind Farm is a little bit better than that at 45 percent, but for the 55 percent of the time that it isn’t producing power, backup is required. Often, intermittent renewable power power supplies are backed up by dirty and inefficient power.

The Waimea Generating Station is located only a few hundred yards from my house. It is owned and operated by Hawaii Electric Light Company, Inc. (HELCO). The plant consists of three 2.5 MW diesel engine generators that are fired on Number 2 fuel oil with a maximum sulfur content of 0.5 percent by weight. Every time I notice that its calm on my morning run, I can always find the smoke rising from these generators. They come on when the wind turbines aren’t spinning.

When people talk about the intermittent nature of resources like the wind and sun, they are referring to the fact that there are times — often unpredictable — when these resources aren’t producing. At 7 am, the world is waking up and demand for electricity is climbing. At that early hour, and with the sun perhaps not yet shining brightly enough for solar power to contribute appreciably, back-up power is needed in areas like my neighborhood that utilize wind power when it’s available.

That is the nature of intermittent resources. People don’t usually think about the fact that if the wind isn’t blowing that an electric utility — somewhere — brings on line backup power. When this happens, for the consumer it is transparent. Their toaster continues to function as it did when the wind was blowing. People don’t realize it’s happening, unless they see it happen (as I did several times this past week on my morning run when I saw the smoke rising).

Good backup or storage options are required for intermittent resources. At times these renewables can be backed up by hydropower, but more often than not they are backed up just like the Hawi Renewable Development Wind Farm — with fossil fuels.

Promising energy storage options are in development. These include batteries, compressed air, flywheels, and hydrogen production. Without economical backup and storage options, renewable power will be unable to reach its full potential. That’s why I have referred to this as The Most Important Problem in Renewable Energy.

Consumer Energy Report » R-Squared Energy Blog by Robert Rapier



7 Comments on "When the Wind Doesn’t Blow"

  1. rockman on Mon, 9th Jun 2014 7:57 am 

    “Good backup or storage options are required for intermittent resources”. As pointed out before the big wind power build out in Texas hasn’t been done to eliminate (or at least mothball) our coal burning capacity. It was done to supplement our growth in electrical demand even during the national recession that, with the exception of mortgage problems, had no significant impact on the state. And today the expectation of growth of the Texas economy will require continued expansion of the alts as well as dependency on lignite/coal.

    But one bright spot on that lignite burning future: a $400 million pipeline is currently being built in Texas from the 2nd largest source of GHG in the entire country to an old oil field where the nasties will be sequestered. Texas coal fired plants won’t just be a backup for wind but will continue as a key component of the grid.

  2. Kenz300 on Mon, 9th Jun 2014 9:36 am 

    The transition to safer, cleaner and cheaper alternative energy sources is growing in Texas and around the world.

    We Could Power All 50 States With Wind, Solar and Hydro Washington’s Blog

    http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2014/03/solar-wind-mix-baseload.html

  3. MSN Fanboy on Mon, 9th Jun 2014 10:32 am 

    Kenz, after reading Rockmans Facts… WTF.

    How do you think…. trap. Im guessing you convinced yourself a while back renewables like solar panels share no fossil fuel components.

    Or you dont believe in Global Warming.

    Im intrested; which one of the above assertions is correct?

  4. longtimber on Mon, 9th Jun 2014 3:40 pm 

    Minute by Minute Demand & Generation mix as well as Imports/Exports for Spain.

    https://demanda.ree.es/movil/peninsula/demanda/acumulada

    Great User Interface. You can select Language or Stack Graph for any minute of any day. How cool is that?

    When we get for the US?

  5. J-Gav on Mon, 9th Jun 2014 5:05 pm 

    Rockman – It’s pretty clear coal isn’t going away any time soon, even if it might get pricier due to clean-up regulations.
    Concerning the rest of your post, energy-wise, the configuration in Texas is not shared by many other states, is it? A rather privileged position by any measure. Although the water situation could put some pressure on that if the drought conditions continue …

  6. Norm on Tue, 10th Jun 2014 3:44 am 

    just run the diesel generators all the time.

    then you don’t need those ugly windmills scarring what used to be a pretty coastline.

  7. Kenz300 on Wed, 11th Jun 2014 7:25 am 

    Coal, natural gas and nuclear fired power plants all require huge amounts of water to generate electricity.

    Wind and solar require little or no water to provide electricity.

    Something to think about as water becomes scarce…….

    One more reason to speed up the transition to safer, cleaner, cheaper and less thirsty alternative energy sources.

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