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How many offshore wind turbines does New England need?

Hannah Livingston, Julie K. Lundquist

2020Meteorological Applications21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The proliferation of countries and regions with 100% clean or renewable energy targets necessitates an analysis to determine the number of generating units and storage needed to meet real‐time electricity demand on the electric grid. The coastal areas of New England have the capacity to produce a large percentage of the region's energy needs with offshore wind turbines. Here we model offshore wind turbine power production data using MERRA‐2 reanalysis and lidar wind speed data sets. We compare this power production to the New England hourly grid demand over the course of one year. 2,000 10 MW offshore wind turbines could satisfy New England's grid demand for about 37% of the year. When combined with 55 GWh of storage, 2,000 turbines could satisfy grid demand for about 72% of the year.

Topics & Concepts

Offshore wind powerWind powerRenewable energyGridTurbineEnvironmental scienceMarine engineeringSubmarine pipelineElectricityMeteorologyPumped-storage hydroelectricityElectricity generationSea breezeProduction (economics)Power (physics)OceanographyDistributed generationEngineeringElectrical engineeringGeologyGeographyEconomicsMacroeconomicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsMechanical engineeringGeodesyWind Energy Research and DevelopmentEnergy Load and Power ForecastingAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
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