Effects of global warming on wind energy availability
Author(s) -
Diandong Ren
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of renewable and sustainable energy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.475
H-Index - 43
ISSN - 1941-7012
DOI - 10.1063/1.3486072
Subject(s) - global warming , environmental science , atmosphere (unit) , wind power , greenhouse gas , climate change , atmospheric sciences , climate model , meteorology , climatology , atmospheric model , scale (ratio) , geography , geology , engineering , electrical engineering , oceanography , cartography
The use of wind energy reduces our greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere. In this study, we proposed a generic power-law relationship between global warming and the usable wind energy (Betz’s law). The power law index (∼4, region dependent) is then determined using simulated atmospheric parameters from eight global coupled ocean-atmosphere climate models (CGCMs). It is found that the power-law relationship holds across all eight climate models and also is time scale independent. Reduction of wind power scales with the degree of warming according to a generic power-law relationship. Thus, the earlier we switch to clean energy, and thereby decrease the global climate warming trend, the more cost-effective will be the harnessing of wind energy. This relationship is an area-averaged consequence of the reduced poleward temperature gradient as the climate warms during the 21st Century; it does not imply spatial uniformity over a region of interest.
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