Using Today’s Wind Energy
June 4, 2011 by Gordon Zwillenberg
Filed under Green Energy, Green Products
TweetWind Energy has been utilised for centuries. Today, the windmills are bigger and they produce more energy. You can even utilize wind energy at your home or building. It’s a free resource, we might use.
How Were Windmills Used Before?
Windmills were first utilised to pump water for agriculture and domestic use. As time went on, windmills were used for grinding grain and other farm products. Even up to the middle of the 20th century, windmills were still expended to pump water for livestock and other farming needs.
How Are Windmills Being Utilised Today?
Today’s windmills are getting bigger and bigger. The bigger the windmill and rotor length, the wind energy produces goes up exponentially. In 1981, rotors were ten meters long with a rating of 25 kilowatts. In 2,000, rotors are over 70 feet long with a rating of 1,600 kilowatts.
In relating this to a home or community, one megawatt (1,000 kilowatts) of wind energy can supply enough electricity for 225 to 300 homes. With a large windmill, you could provide furnish electricity for a small town or factory.
Where Are Windmill Farms Constructed?
Windmill farms are being built along farmlands, lakes and oceans. Flat areas and oceans provide easy access to build the units and supply record amounts of wind energy.
Windmills are not erected in urban areas. The close proximity to tall buildings, along with the roads and freeways, possibly could cause a potential hazard or catastrophe.
How Efficient Is Wind Energy?
Wind Energy does not work all the time. There may be days, when it is not windy. Your typical windmill has a 20% to 30% capacity to develop power.
What Ought You Do, Before You Begin To Build A Windmill?
You may make your own windmill and get wind energy for your property. First, you must access your situation. Do you have enough area to work and build your windmill? Could you build it solely within your right-of-way? If you might, go on to the following step.
How much power do you necessitate for your property? The windmill may develop 700 to 1,000 watts per day. Will you demand more than one windmill?
If you need two or more windmills, you may want to have a large windmill built. They might amount to $20,000 to build. You will expend less on sustaining one large windmill versus three smaller windmills.
What Do I Demand To Do To Finish My Preliminary Work?
You demand to assess your project location and your access to the local utility power lines. The windmill ought to not be near aerial electrical lines. An electrician could bind the power lines from the windmill in with the utility company’s system.
Windmills can lower your electric bill by 50% to 90%. This is dependent on your electrical use, number of windy days and the unit figure. Windmills may save you money over time.
You might erect an eight to eleven foot tall windmill. This unit creates about 700 to 1,000 watts of electricity per day. You could buy a kit that contains the plans and details for the windmill.
What Could the Kit Encompass?
Your kit must include:
1. Step-By-Step Instructions – with pictures or a video. Anyone needs to be able to construct this windmill, whether they have technical experience or not.
2. Materials List – so that you know what to buy and where to get it. You may need to order some parts online.
3. Warranty – Most kits have a 60-day Money Back Warranty.
4. Support Staff – If you have any questions, you necessitate to contact someone.
5. Maintenance – You wish for your windmills to last a long time.
You Might Do It!
You can build your own windmill. It’s not tough. You might initiate saving electricity and money.
Good luck with your project!
Want to find out more about wind-energy, then visit Gordon Zwillenberg’s site on how to choose the best wind-power for your needs.
Corus plans to open wind farm business on Teesside
August 18, 2010 by drjohnmcgowan
Filed under Green Energy
Facility to manufacture steel foundations for offshore wind farms could create up to 220 jobs on site of mothballed Redcar plant
Steelmaker Corus is to develop a new £31.5m offshore wind farm business, creating up to 220 jobs on the site of its mothballed plant in Teesside.
The new facility will be located on the vast 3,000-acre site in Redcar, bringing much-needed cheer to the town, which was battered by the loss of more than 1,000 jobs when the Teesside Cast Products business was shut down earlier this year after more than 170 years of steelmaking in the area. It will produce the steel structures used to fix wind turbines to the seabed known as monopiles.
Geoff Waterfield, chairman of the Corus multi-union committee, said: “It is absolutely fantastic. We are so due a bit of good news. People have been through very hard times and we deserve this good news today. Companies like ours should certainly be looking at renewable energy, as projects will require a huge amount of steel and the north-east has been earmarked for that. But it is a new area for Corus and it is a little bit of a gamble. This is a good opportunity for the government to give some support to Corus that was not forthcoming earlier in the year.”
Talks over the sale of the Redcar plant to Thai industrial group SSI have been under way since May and unions hope a deal will be sealed imminently. The proposed development will not affect negotiations. “We are still in a strange sort of limbo state as we are waiting for the news on the main event,” Waterfield said.
The government has approved plans to build thousands of offshore wind turbines and Corus believes that around 6m tonnes of steel will be needed for the foundations and towers.
Kirby Adams, Corus’s outgoing chief executive, said: “This is one of a wide range of new employment and business opportunities which Corus is working on in Teesside. It also follows recent recruitment at our Hartlepool and Skinningrove plants, as well as at our South Yorkshire and Scottish plants.”
The Teesside plant was mothballed after a consortium of international investors pulled out of a 10-year contract. Adams, who is leaving after 18 months for “personal reasons”, has been heavily criticised for his handling of the affair. He was attacked by unions earlier this month when Corus’s owner, Tata Steel Europe, revealed that company’s the highest paid director – almost certainly Adams – received more than £2m last year. According to the GMB union, Corus has cut 6,000 jobs across Europe since he joined the company, which has now returned to profit after pre-tax losses of £662m in the first nine months of last year.


