Large wind farms in certain areas in the
United States appear to affect local land surface temperatures, according to a
paper published today in the journal Nature Climate Change.
The study, led by Liming Zhou, an
atmospheric scientist at the State University of New York- (SUNY) Albany,
provides insights about the possible effects of wind farms.
The results could be important for
developing efficient adaptation and management strategies to ensure long-term
sustainability of wind power.
"This study indicates that land
surface temperatures have warmed in the vicinity of large wind farms in
west-central Texas, especially at night," says Anjuli Bamzai, program
director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Atmospheric and
Geospace Sciences, which funded the research.
"The observations and analyses are
for a relatively short period, but raise important issues that deserve
attention as we move toward an era of rapid growth in wind farms in our quest
for alternate energy sources."
Considerable research has linked the
carbon dioxide produced by burning fossil fuels with rising global
temperatures.
Consequently, many nations are moving
toward cleaner sources of renewable energy such as wind turbines. Generating
wind power creates no emissions, uses no water and is likely "green."
"We need to better understand the
system with observations, and better describe and model the complex processes
involved, to predict how wind farms may affect future weather and
climate," said Zhou.
There have been a growing number of
studies of wind farm effects on weather and climate, primarily using numerical
models due to the lack of observations over wind farms.
As numerical models are computationally
intensive and have uncertainties in simulating regional and local weather and
climate, said Zhou, remote sensing is likely the most efficient and effective
way to study wind farm effects over larger spatial and longer temporal scales.
To understand the potential impact of
wind farms on local weather and climate, Zhou's team analyzed satellite-derived
land surface temperatures from regions around large wind farms in Texas for the
period 2003-2011.
The researchers found a night-time
warming effect over wind farms of up to 0.72 degrees Celsius per decade over
the nine-year-period in which data were collected.
Because the spatial pattern of warming
mirrors the geographic distribution of wind turbines, the scientists attribute
the warming primarily to wind farms.
The year-to-year land surface
temperature over wind farms shows a persistent upward trend from 2003 to 2011,
consistent with the increasing number of operational wind turbines with time.
"This warming effect is most likely
caused by the turbulence in turbine wakes acting like fans to pull down warmer
near-surface air from higher altitudes at night," said Somnath Baidya Roy
of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a co-author of the paper.
While the warming effect reported is
local and small compared to the strong background year-to-year land surface
temperature variation, the authors believe that this work draws attention to an
important scientific issue that requires further investigation.
"The estimated warming trends only
apply to the study region and to the study period, and thus should not be
interpolated into other regions, globally or over longer periods," Zhou
said. "For a given wind farm, once there are no new wind turbines added,
the warming effect may reach a stable level."
The study represents a first step in
exploring the potential of using satellite data to quantify the possible
effects of the development of big wind farms on weather and climate, said Chris
Thorncroft of SUNY-Albany, a co-author of the paper.
"We're expanding this approach to
other wind farms," said Thorncroft, "and building models to
understand the physical processes and mechanisms driving the interactions of
wind turbines and the atmosphere boundary layer near the surface."
Other authors of the paper include Lance
Bosart at SUNY-Albany, Yuhong Tian of NOAA, and Yuanlong Hu at Terra-Gen Power
LLC in San Diego, Calif.
-NSF-
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