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And wind power in the UK does not have a single extra generator built to accomodate it, not a single one, nor are any planned.
That very rarely happens. It's usually that there's a fault in the network and the power can't get to the consumer from the generators.
Aircraft are 130 dBs, whereas Windmills are like 80-90 dB when it's really windy.
QuoteAnd wind power in the UK does not have a single extra generator built to accomodate it, not a single one, nor are any planned.That is the problem in a nutshell. We are phasing out reliable sources and replacing them with unreliable ones.
QuoteThat very rarely happens. It's usually that there's a fault in the network and the power can't get to the consumer from the generators. Alas, it happens for several weeks of each year. No fault, just no demand for expensive windpower, so the supply contract ensures that the taxpayer pays anyway.
QuoteAircraft are 130 dBs, whereas Windmills are like 80-90 dB when it's really windy. Which is why I mentioned arrivals, not departures. Quite a different noise spectum.
It does seem that windfarm capacity factors have improved, I will grant you, but that masks the underlying problem that the capacity factor of a coal or nuclear station is determined by economics whereas that of a wind farm is determined by the weather. We have some control and discretion over the former but not the latter, and it is a sad but inevitable fact of meteorology that the days with the highest power demand are those with the lowest wind speed (persistent anticyclones).
I would be delighted if all our energy needs could be met by renewables, but present policies are not helping.
Actually reliability, wind is more reliable. If the forecast says you'll get a certain amount of power, you do get that. With other sources, the power station can get a fault and disappear, all at once.
But I would argue that increases in productivity from automation and computers in other industries haven't always resulted in higher wages, or more leisure time, for all workers.
Land and housing prices often go up at 5% to 10% a year, while wages and the price of commodities increase at a much slower rate of perhaps 3% a year.
QuoteActually reliability, wind is more reliable. If the forecast says you'll get a certain amount of power, you do get that. With other sources, the power station can get a fault and disappear, all at once.We live and learn. On my planet, all rotating machinery is subject to occasional breakdown and surface wind forecasts are at best an educated guess. But what do I know? I only fly around in the stuff, propelled by rotating machinery. And whenever I fly near a windfarm, I notice a substantial proportion of windmills are not turning: clearly there is no demand for free electricity on Earth, since they are all 100% reliable.
There is however a more serious side to "reliability". The point of electricity, gas, JETA1, coal, or cow dung, is that you can get the power you need when you need it, not when the wind thinks fit. And if you need more, you just turn on the tap or shovel more peat into the furnace: "no wind" won't appease the train traveller or the victim on the operating table.
Without even going into details of general meteorology and cyclone genesis, I might ask windmill enthusiasts to step outside around dawn and dusk. Remarkably, just when electricity demand is highest, surface windspeed is least.
QuoteActually reliability, wind is more reliable. If the forecast says you'll get a certain amount of power, you do get that. With other sources, the power station can get a fault and disappear, all at once.We live and learn. On my planet, all rotating machinery is subject to occasional breakdown and surface wind forecasts are at best an educated guess. But what do I know?
The UK has plenty of capacity.
●● security of supply is threatened as existing plant closes: overthe next decade we will lose around a quarter (around 20 GW) ofour existing generation capacity as old or more polluting plant close.Modelling suggests that de-rated1 capacity margins could fall belowfive per cent around the end of this decade, increasing the likelihoodof costly blackouts. In addition to this huge reduction in existingcapacity, the future electricity system will also contain more intermittentgeneration (such as wind) and inflexible generation (such as nuclear).This raises additional challenges in terms of meeting demand at alltimes, for example when the wind does not blow;
Well, you're clearly not a meteorologist.
Really? Can you point to that in the above chart for the last week, because I can't see that ever happening.
Incidentally I'm intrigued by the high capacity factors now being claimed. These don't match up with the wind roses, so I wondered how to get a high capacity factor without breaking the laws of physics. It turns out to be very easy. If I put a 100 kW wing on a 50 kW alternator, I will get twice the capacity factor because the alternator is working flat out when the wing is only at 50% power. It all depends on what you mean by "installed capacity", and knowing how politicians like their statistics massaged, you can get any answer you like.
On that particular day (Tuesday October 6, 2013) the graph I sent you a link to shows the UK wind farms produced a rock-steady 2G of power the whole day, which is almost exactly average,
The wind is always lower in summer, and higher in winter. There's also 10GW lower demand then, to some degree this balances out.
The UK could do much the same thing, it already has some taps to Europe.
Since the commissioning of the 2,000 MW DC link in the 1980s [i.e. under an agreement between nationalised industries] the bulk of power flow through the link has been from France to Britain.