WIND ENERGY
Potential in the United States
Estimates of the electricity that could potentially be generated by wind
power and of the land area available for wind energy have been calculated for
the United States. The potential electric power from wind energy is surprisingly
large. Good wind areas, which cover 6 % of the U.S. land area, have the
potential to supply more than one and a half times the current electricity
consumption of the United States. Technology under development today will be
capable of producing electricity economically from good wind sites in many
regions of the country.
A wind energy resource atlas of the United States
shows that areas po-
tentially suitable for wind energy applications are dispersed throughout much of
the United States. Estimates of the wind resource in this atlas are expressed in
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wind power classes ranging from class 1 to class 7, with each class representing
a range of mean wind power density or equivalent mean speed at specified
heights above the ground. Areas designated class 4 or greater are suitable with
advanced wind turbine technology under development today. Power class
3 areas may be suitable for future generation technology. Class 2 areas are
marginal and class 1 areas unsuitable for wind energy development.
Several factors determine the amount of land area suitable for wind
energy development within a particular grid cell in a region of high wind energy
potential. The important factors include the percentage of land exposed to the
wind resource and land-use and environmental restrictions. The land area
exposed to the wind for each grid cell was estimated based on a landform
classification and ranged from 90 % for relatively flat terrain down to 5 % for
mountainous terrain. Estimates of land area excluded from wind energy
development, in percent per grid cell, were made for various types of land-use
(e. g., forest, agricultural, range, and urban lands). Environmental exclusion
areas were defined as federal and state lands (including parks, monuments,
wilderness areas, wildlife refuges, and other protected areas) where wind energy
development would be prohibited or severely restricted. The wind electric
potential per grid cell was calculated from the available windy land area and the
wind power classification assigned to each cell. The amount of potential
electricity that can be generated is dependent on several factors, including the
spacing between, wind turbines, the assumed efficiency of the machines, the
turbine hub height, and the estimated energy losses (caused by wind turbine
wakes, blade soiling, etc.). Estimates of wind turbine efficiency and power
losses are based on data from existing turbines. For advanced turbines,
efficiency is projected to be 30 %–35 % and power losses 10 %–15 %.
The considerable wind electric potential has not been tapped before
because wind turbine technology was not able to utilize this resource. However,
during the past decade, increased knowledge of wind turbine behaviour has led
to more cost-effective wind turbines that are more efficient in producing
electricity.
The price of the electricity produced from wind by these advanced
turbines is estimated to be competitive with conventional sources of power,
including fossil fuels. Because of the increasing competitiveness of wind
energy, wind resource assessment will become essential in incorporating wind
energy into the nation's energy mix. The importance of accurate wind resource
assessment is also recognized in other parts of the world.
Detailed wind resource assessments have been proposed or are being
considered as part of a plan to increase the use of wind energy in Europe, Asia,
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Latin America, and other regions. The decreasing cost of wind power and the
growing interest in renewable energy sources should ensure that wind power
will become a viable energy source in the United States and worldwide.
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