Showing posts with label ALTERNATIVE ENERGY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ALTERNATIVE ENERGY. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2022

A new method boosts wind farms’ energy output, without new equipment

 

For essentially no cost, engineers at #MIT have figured out a way to generate enough electricity to power 3 million homes from current #WindTurbines without adding another turbine.
From another perspective, it would take about 3,600 new #wind turbines to produce that amount of power - equating to almost a billion dollars of extra revenue for the wind farm operators per year.


Virtually all wind turbines, which produce more than 5 percent of the world’s electricity, are controlled as if they were individual, free-standing units. In fact, the vast majority are part of larger wind farm installations involving dozens or even hundreds of turbines, whose wakes can affect each other.

Now, engineers at MIT and elsewhere have found that, with no need for any new investment in equipment, the energy output of such wind farm installations can be increased by modeling the wind flow of the entire collection of turbines and optimizing the control of individual units accordingly.

The increase in energy output from a given installation may seem modest — it’s about 1.2 percent overall, and 3 percent for optimal wind speeds. But the algorithm can be deployed at any wind farm, and the number of wind farms is rapidly growing to meet accelerated climate goals. If that 1.2 percent energy increase were applied to all the world’s existing wind farms, it would be the equivalent of adding more than 3,600 new wind turbines, or enough to power about 3 million homes, and a total gain to power producers of almost a billion dollars per year, the researchers say. And all of this for essentially no cost.

The research is published today in the journal Nature Energy, in a study led by MIT Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Michael F. Howland.

“Essentially all existing utility-scale turbines are controlled ‘greedily’ and independently,” says Howland. The term “greedily,” he explains, refers to the fact that they are controlled to maximize only their own power production, as if they were isolated units with no detrimental impact on neighboring turbines.

But in the real world, turbines are deliberately spaced close together in wind farms to achieve economic benefits related to land use (on- or offshore) and to infrastructure such as access roads and transmission lines. This proximity means that turbines are often strongly affected by the turbulent wakes produced by others that are upwind from them — a factor that individual turbine-control systems do not currently take into account.

“From a flow-physics standpoint, putting wind turbines close together in wind farms is often the worst thing you could do,” Howland says. “The ideal approach to maximize total energy production would be to put them as far apart as possible,” but that would increase the associated costs.

That’s where the work of Howland and his collaborators comes in. They developed a new flow model which predicts the power production of each turbine in the farm depending on the incident winds in the atmosphere and the control strategy of each turbine. While based on flow-physics, the model learns from operational wind farm data to reduce predictive error and uncertainty. Without changing anything about the physical turbine locations and hardware systems of existing wind farms, they have used the physics-based, data-assisted modeling of the flow within the wind farm and the resulting power production of each turbine, given different wind conditions, to find the optimal orientation for each turbine at a given moment. This allows them to maximize the output from the whole farm, not just the individual turbines.

Today, each turbine constantly senses the incoming wind direction and speed and uses its internal control software to adjust its yaw (vertical axis) angle position to align as closely as possible to the wind. But in the new system, for example, the team has found that by turning one turbine just slightly away from its own maximum output position — perhaps 20 degrees away from its individual peak output angle — the resulting increase in power output from one or more downwind units will more than make up for the slight reduction in output from the first unit. By using a centralized control system that takes all of these interactions into account, the collection of turbines was operated at power output levels that were as much as 32 percent higher under some conditions.

In a months-long experiment in a real utility-scale wind farm in India, the predictive model was first validated by testing a wide range of yaw orientation strategies, most of which were intentionally suboptimal. By testing many control strategies, including suboptimal ones, in both the real farm and the model, the researchers could identify the true optimal strategy. Importantly, the model was able to predict the farm power production and the optimal control strategy for most wind conditions tested, giving confidence that the predictions of the model would track the true optimal operational strategy for the farm. This enables the use of the model to design the optimal control strategies for new wind conditions and new wind farms without needing to perform fresh calculations from scratch.

Then, a second months-long experiment at the same farm, which implemented only the optimal control predictions from the model, proved that the algorithm’s real-world effects could match the overall energy improvements seen in simulations. Averaged over the entire test period, the system achieved a 1.2 percent increase in energy output at all wind speeds, and a 3 percent increase at speeds between 6 and 8 meters per second (about 13 to 18 miles per hour).

While the test was run at one wind farm, the researchers say the model and cooperative control strategy can be implemented at any existing or future wind farm. Howland estimates that, translated to the world’s existing fleet of wind turbines, a 1.2 percent overall energy improvement would produce  more than 31 terawatt-hours of additional electricity per year, approximately equivalent to installing an extra 3,600 wind turbines at no cost. This would translate into some $950 million in extra revenue for the wind farm operators per year, he says.

The amount of energy to be gained will vary widely from one wind farm to another, depending on an array of factors including the spacing of the units, the geometry of their arrangement, and the variations in wind patterns at that location over the course of a year. But in all cases, the model developed by this team can provide a clear prediction of exactly what the potential gains are for a given site, Howland says. “The optimal control strategy and the potential gain in energy will be different at every wind farm, which motivated us to develop a predictive wind farm model which can be used widely, for optimization across the wind energy fleet,” he adds.

But the new system can potentially be adopted quickly and easily, he says. “We don’t require any additional hardware installation. We’re really just making a software change, and there’s a significant potential energy increase associated with it.” Even a 1 percent improvement, he points out, means that in a typical wind farm of about 100 units, operators could get the same output with one fewer turbine, thus saving the costs, usually millions of dollars, associated with purchasing, building, and installing that unit.

Further, he notes, by reducing wake losses the algorithm could make it possible to place turbines more closely together within future wind farms, therefore increasing the power density of wind energy, saving on land (or sea) footprints. This power density increase and footprint reduction could help to achieve pressing greenhouse gas emission reduction goals, which call for a substantial expansion of wind energy deployment, both on and offshore.

What’s more, he says, the biggest new area of wind farm development is offshore, and “the impact of wake losses is often much higher in offshore wind farms.” That means the impact of this new approach to controlling those wind farms could be significantly greater.

The Howland Lab and the international team is continuing to refine the models further and working to improve the operational instructions they derive from the model, moving toward autonomous, cooperative control and striving for the greatest possible power output from a given set of conditions, Howland says.

“This paper describes a significant step forward for wind power,” says Charles Meneveau, a professor of mechanical engineering at Johns Hopkins University, who was not involved in this work. “It includes new ideas and methodologies to effectively control wind turbines collectively under the highly variable wind energy resource. It shows that smartly implemented yaw control strategies using state-of-the-art physics-based wake models, supplemented with data-driven approaches, can increase power output in wind farms.” The fact that this was demonstrated in an operating wind farm, he says, “is of particular importance to facilitate subsequent implementation and scale-up of the proposed approach.”

The research team includes Jesús Bas Quesada, Juan José Pena Martinez, and Felipe Palou Larrañaga of Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy Innovation and Technology in Navarra, Spain; Neeraj Yadav and Jasvipul Chawla at ReNew Power Private Limited in Haryana, India; Varun Sivaram formerly at ReNew Power Private Limited in Haryana, India and presently at the Office of the U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, United States Department of State; and John Dabiri at California Institute of Technology. The work was supported by the MIT Energy Initiative and Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy.

LINK









ENERGY SOLUTIONS

THESE ARE JUST A FEW ARTICLES POSTED THAT INDICATE THAT THE REST OF THE WORLD IS INNOVATING, FINDING SOLUTIONS AND MOVING FORWARD.... 



EVs and solar just the start of becoming renewable superpower, says Cannon-Brookes
Excerpt.
"Tech billionaire and clean energy advocate Mike Cannon-Brookes says Australia must seize the opportunity to become a renewable energy superpower, and a key to that will be what happens in the home – with rooftop solar, electric vehicles and full electrification."
"Cannon-Brookes, best known for his backing of what could be the world’s biggest solar and battery project, and for taking on the former Coalition government with words, and the country’s biggest polluter AGL with both money and words, is now focusing on accelerating the EV transition and full electrification."
https://reneweconomy.com.au/evs-and-solar-just-the-start-of-becoming-renewable-superpower-says-cannon-brookes/


excerpt:
VW: If we had fuel standards today, we could bring in electric cars tomorrow
German car maker Volkswagen says ambitious fuel standards in Australia would have an almost immediate impact on the supply blockage of electric vehicles in Australia.

“If we had standards today, we could start bringing in (electric cars) tomorrow,” Paul Sansom, the head of VW Group in Australia, told the EV Summit in Canberra on Friday, where the Labor government has called for submissions to an upcoming discussion paper on the issue.

“That’s a game changer. It really is. Not just for Volkswagen but for all car makers. It will open up the door for more affordable EVs, there’s no doubt about that.”

VW is the second biggest car maker in the world by volume, and is one of a number of major car makers that either hasn’t bothered bringing EVs to Australia, or has brought in only limited supplies because of the lack of fuel standards and other incentives.

Its focus is on markets that do have standards, encouraging car makers to supply more EVs to lower their company wide emissions from the majority fossil fuel fleet.
https://thedriven.io/2022/08/19/vw-if-we-had-fuel-standards-today-we-could-bring-in-electric-cars-tomorrow/


CLEAN ENERGY STORAGE

Excerpt.
"A huge 500MW/1000MWh battery at the site of the shuttered Wallerawang coal fired power station near Lithgow has won planning approval from NSW state government authorities."
"The Wallerawang battery – to be developed by Greenspot – is one of the biggest of a number of big batteries proposed for NSW, the country’s biggest and most coal dependent grid, and which is plotting for a dramatic and rapid transition to renewables and storage."
Huge 1,000MWh battery at site of closed coal plant gets NSW planning approval
RENEWECONOMY.COM.AU
Huge 1,000MWh battery at site of closed coal plant gets NSW planning approval
https://reneweconomy.com.au/huge-1000mwh-battery-at-site-of-closed-coal-plant-gets-nsw-planning-approval/

This is a big part of the successful solution:

Australian Financial Institutions Join The REVolution



https://cleantechnica.com/2022/08/19/australian-financial-institutions-join-the-revolution/



Australia’s first electric truck manufacturer revs up
Excerpt.
"In September 2021, SEA Electric celebrated a significant milestone when its first electric-powered SEA 300-45 truck rolled off its Melbourne production line, following the company receiving Australian Design Rules certification for local volume production."
"The certification makes it one of only three original equipment manufacturers building trucks in Australia and the only one making an electric truck."
"The Japanese-sourced Hino trucks, on which the SEA 300-45 and others in the range are based, arrive at the Melbourne facility as fully constructed and trimmed cabs, and the remainder of the truck is built from components assembled on site."
Australia’s first electric truck manufacturer revs up - Create
CREATEDIGITAL.ORG.AU
Australia’s first electric truck manufacturer revs up - Create
Australia’s first electric truck company, Melbourne-based SEA-Electric, is assembling a fleet to help reduce carbon emissions.

Hyundai Ioniq 5 Is Car And Driver's EV Of The Year
Hyundai Ioniq 5 Is Car And Driver's EV Of The Year



LINK


Tesla Supercharger network ranks highest in customer satisfaction, finds J.D. Power
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GREENCARREPORTS.COM
Tesla Supercharger network ranks highest in customer satisfaction, finds J.D. Power
The survey giant also noted that charging-hardware reliability is becoming an issue, with an increasing portion of respondents pointing to malfunctioning equipment.
https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1136861_tesla-supercharger-network-ranks-highest-in-customer-satisfaction-finds-j-d-power




Origin Energy – unlike its consumers – has enjoyed the benefits of soaring international gas prices, helping it  deliver an improved underlying profit last year, despite major problems as its Eraring coal plant and a massive unrealised paper loss stemming from volatile markets.

The LNG business – focused on the export market – delivered a cash windfall of $1.6 billion in the last financial year, papering over a 63 per cent slump in its energy market earnings, which was driven primarily by problems at Eraring, the country’s biggest coal generator which is due to close in three years time.

The declared net loss of $1.43 billion looks bad for the company, but take away the unrealised losses of more than $2 billion the reality is that despite, or even because of, the chaos in global energy markets, its key metrics – underlying profit, cash flow and dividend payments – did well.

That’s good news for shareholders. The bigger question for the market, its customers and the broader community is how the country’s biggest energy retailer will manage the green energy transition, which it says is accelerating, and for which it insists it is well placed.

The question of LNG is unlikely to addressed anytime soon until its major international customers find alternative sources, such as green hydrogen, although it is going to be interesting to see how Origin treats this in its upcoming climate report, which will look at its role in a 1.5°C target.

For now, the focus is on the domestic operations, and the big item there is the planned closure of the 2.8GW Eraring plant, now set for late 2025.

In the last financial year, Eraring enjoyed a doubling in its price per megawatt hour to $152/MWh – thanks to the surging wholesale electricity prices – but suffered a 15 per cent slump in output because it couldn’t get enough coal.

That forced Origin to pay top dollar for both coal and power in the spot market to meet its retailing commitments, and the result would have been even worse were it not for the increased output from renewables, including the much delayed Stockyard Hill wind project in Victoria.

That wind farm will be the biggest in the country when complete – at least until the gigawatt scale McIntyre project in Queensland is built – and also one of the lowest cost, with a bundled fixed price in the low $50s/MWh, a fraction of the price Origin had to pay to buy electricity from other sources on the spot market in the past year.

Sourcing coal for Eraring – which is still due to close in late 2025 – remains a problem.

So far the company has locked in only four million tonnes and needs another 1.6 million tonnes for the current financial year. The price of coal has fallen dramatically from its recent peaks of more than $400/tonne, but the uncertainty in the market is so great Origin has declined to put out an energy market profit forecast.

Origin sees itself as a “leader” in the energy transition but is yet to deliver hard evidence of actually being that, and building and contracting the bulk wind and solar and storage needed to replace the assets it and others are closing.

It is, however, starting to make the right moves.

It has flagged the 700MW (and up to four hour) Eraring battery that will partially replace the coal generator, and is currently going through a tender process with suppliers, although it says it is clear that rises in lithium and nickel prices is inflating the cost of the technology.

It is yet to be seen in what way that complicates its plans for the battery. A proposal to the board on the first stage of the project – likely to be around 460MW – is expected within the next  few months.

On the issue of bulk renewables, Origin has recently bought the Yarrabee and Carisbrook solar farms, with a  potential combined capacity of nearly1GW, and says its solar pipeline has now grown to 1.3GW. But there is as yet no final commitment to move forward with either project.

It is also a bidder for CWP Renewables, now chaired by former CEO Grant King, which has a sizeable portfolio of more than 1GW of assets in operation and under construction, and another couple of gigawatts in the pipeline. CWP is currently going through an auction process, with QIC and Iberdrola also likely bidders.

“We will deploy capital wisely, and one way you’ll see evidence of that, is we said we would partner with third parties in terms of funding renewables investment, and you can see, it’s been publicised as to who we’re partnering with in relation to the CWP process, as an example,” CEO Frank Calabria told analysts.

“We’ve already acquired 1,300 MW of late stage solar development projects this year (Yarabee, Carisbrook, Yanco etc).

“You should think about us delivering against our strategy through a combination of building, contracting and buying renewables assets, including working with third parties to make sure we manage our capital effectively.”

The good news for Origin is that the market is starting to resume what could be described as its normal pattern, with moderating fossil fuel prices, the growing influence of renewables, and unreliable ageing coal generators falling over and adding to the price volatility, which Origin is planning for.

“We see no let up in renewables coming into the system, we’ve seen some large wind farms being committed. …  built and allowed to come into the system,” head of markets Greg Jarvis told analysts.

“We’ve seen that with our own Stockyard Hill wind projects in Victoria, and we’re not seeing any let up in rooftop solar as well.”

That means that rooftop solar is continuing to carve up and hollow out the market in the middle of the day, putting extra pressure on coal generators that don’t like to ramp up and down.

“We’re seeing quite low prices in the middle of the day. So the key to this market is storage, to be ready for these events, and that’s where we are well positioned.”

LINK



LAX to become one of United States' largest charging ports with 1,300-EV-charger revamp






Excerpt.
"Based on preliminary designs, Photon Energy will develop a solar generation capacity of 300 MW with a grid connection capacity of 150 MW. The target storage energy storage capacity is 3.6 GWh, equivalent to 24 hours of full load, to the grid, from storage. This will exceed the 3 GWh capacity of the Ouarzazate Solar Power Station in Morocco, which currently has the world’s largest energy storage capacity of any type, excluding pumped hydro."
“We are very excited to be developing this innovative and globally significant solar energy storage project in South Australia."

Top News | 'Totally Crazy': Trump Holds Housing Bill Hostage to Eviscerate Voting Rights

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