{"id":32526,"date":"2012-09-24T05:16:17","date_gmt":"2012-09-24T09:16:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/planetsave.com\/?p=32526"},"modified":"2012-09-24T05:16:17","modified_gmt":"2012-09-24T09:16:17","slug":"atlantic-offshore-wind-energy-can-power-the-entire-east-coast","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/planetsave.com\/articles\/atlantic-offshore-wind-energy-can-power-the-entire-east-coast\/","title":{"rendered":"Atlantic Offshore Wind Energy Can Power the Entire East Coast"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Stanford University research team employed a state-of-the-art offshore wind power model to simulate the installation of 144,000 5-megawatt wind turbines (of the type typically found in European offshore wind farms) at various ocean depths and distances from shore from Florida to Maine, concentrating them in the typically hurricane-free stretch of the Atlantic between Maine and Virginia, according to a Stanford University News report<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/a> The researchers found that offshore winds off the US East Coast produce between 965 and 1,372 terawatt-hours of electricity per year, enough to meet 1\/3 of US electricity demand, or all the power needs of the entire East Coast, from Maine to Florida. The study, \u201cU.S. East Coast Offshore Wind Energy Resources and Their Relationship to Peak-Time Electricity Demand<\/a>,\u201d is available for free download.<\/p>\n Adding significantly to US East Coast offshore wind power<\/a> potential, they also found that East Coast offshore wind energy peaks during the middle of the day. That coincides exactly with peak power demands.<\/p>\n “We knew there was a lot of wind out there, but this is the first actual quantification of the total resource and the time of day that the resource peaks,” commented Stanford University professor of civil and environmental engineering Mark Z. Jacobson, who directed the research project. “This provides practical information to wind farm developers about the best areas to place turbines.”<\/p>\n Research team member and recent Atmosphere\/Energy PhD program graduate Mike Dvorak added: “People mistakenly think that wind energy is not useful because output from most land-based turbines peaks in the late evening\/early morning, when electricity demand is low. The real value of offshore wind energy is that it often peaks when we need the most electricity \u2013 during the middle of the day.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Moreover, installing even this great a number of wind turbines off the US East Coast needn’t compromise ocean vistas or threaten wildlife<\/a>, according to the research team. In their analysis, the researchers limited installations to just one-third of available shallow-water sites out to 30 meters depth, with two-thirds of the remaining sites out to 200 meters depth.<\/p>\n Their analysis highlights the real possibility and multiple benefits that could be realized by developing very large-scale offshore wind farms in Atlantic waters near major East Coast cities, such as Boston and New York City. “Connecting the power to the grid would be technically as easy as laying a cable in the sand and hooking it directly into the grid without the need to build often controversial transmission lines on the land,” Dvorak said.<\/p>\n Besides yielding a huge reduction in US carbon and greenhouse gas emissions, developing a battery of East Coast offshore wind farms would provide a big boost to the US economy, generate a very substantial number of good green jobs and help US commerce and industry innovate and compete in the fast-growing global wind and renewable energy markets.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n All things considered, moving aggressively forward to build offshore wind farms should be a “no-brainer.”<\/p>\n “But the real advantage of wind versus natural gas or coal is that, even though there’s a higher cost now for offshore wind, it results in price stability,” Jacobson said. “There’s zero fuel costs once they’re in the water. Coal and gas are depletable resources, so their cost will inevitably go up over time. The cost of wind energy will remain stable, and the wind resource is infinite.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Not one US offshore wind power project is \u201cin the water.\u201d Strident political opposition, along with bureaucratic, grid interconnection, and technical hurdles continue to hinder offshore wind project development in the US, even as European nations, facing similar obstacles,\u00a0continue to forge ahead<\/a>.<\/p>\n
\nOffshore winds along the East Coast<\/a> could generate enough clean, renewable electrical power for at least one-third of the entire US — or the entire East Coast, from Maine to Florida, including some of the nation’s largest cities, according to a Stanford University study released Sept. 14.<\/p>\n
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\n <\/p>\nNow’s the Time for East Coast Offshore Wind Power<\/h2>\n
Huge Synergy and Benefits to Offshore Wind Power Development<\/h2>\n