| Storing Wind Energy in Water: Another Great Idea |
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| Written by Jeanne Roberts | |
| Thursday, 03 April 2008 | |
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Wind is a clean, renewable source of energy with little to fault it except its inconstancy. Photo:camTrails, Creative Commons, Flickr The same can be said for solar energy. With both, this fickle supply vs demand equation is what keeps these alternative energy sources from replacing fossil fuel energy to any extent. Wind can be relied on if you're having a picnic or a wedding, but rely on it to light your home and wind speeds are either too great, too little, or nonexistent. Even when energy is generated (and not immediately used), the means to store it are cumbersome, chemical-laden, and subject to their own drawbacks and failures.
The turbines operate at variable speed and the blades move very slowly, reaching a top speed of 22 RPM, or one revolution every three seconds, even in the strongest of winds. The three long blades cut in at 4 miles per hour, reach peak production at 31 miles per hour, and cut out at wind speeds of 80 miles per hour. Deep-cycle batteries, recommended for storing wind (or solar) power, are more of the same, and a typical battery array - enough to store the needed 50 kilowatts per day - takes up to 20 batteries in a 4 x 6-foot area. You can imagine costs for yourself, but it is worth noting that deep cycle batteries are the "prima donnas" of the battery world, requiring immense amounts of care and supervision. Battery manufacture is another environmentally sensitive topic, creating soil, air and water contaminants that lead to cancers, cognitive difficulties and reproductive failure in humans and animals. According to Garvey, the plastic-reinforced bags will be able to store 25 megajoules of energy for every meter (cubed) at a depth of about 2,000 feet. The depth is essential, Garvey maintains, because only at sufficient depth and pressure do the bags deliver enough energy to make fabrication economically viable. We've already contaminated our oceans with enough plastic to last until the next millennium; why not put it to good use?Disclosure: I don't own stock in any alternative energy venture. Site Disclaimer Comments
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