4.7 Article

Surface impacts of large offshore wind farms

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac6e49

Keywords

offshore wind; surface temperature; wind turbine; wind farm impacts; wind energy

Funding

  1. University of Delaware (UD) Graduate College Doctoral Fellowship
  2. Delaware Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) [18A00378]
  3. UD School of Marine Science and Policy graduate fellowship

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This study used high-resolution numerical simulations to investigate the surface meteorological impacts of large offshore wind farms equipped with extreme-scale wind turbines. The results showed that the impacts are statistically significant but negligible in magnitude.
Future offshore wind farms around the world will be built with wind turbines of size and capacity never seen before (with diameter and hub height exceeding 150 and 100 m, respectively, and rated power exceeding 10 MW). Their potential impacts at the surface have not yet been studied. Here we conduct high-resolution numerical simulations using a mesoscale model with a wind farm parameterization and compare scenarios with and without offshore wind farms equipped with these 'extreme-scale' wind turbines. Wind speed, turbulence, friction velocity, and sensible heat fluxes are slightly reduced at the surface, like with conventional wind turbines. But, while the warming found below the rotor in stable atmospheric conditions extends to the surface with conventional wind turbines, with extreme-scale ones it does not reach the surface, where instead minimal cooling is found. Overall, the surface meteorological impacts of large offshore wind farms equipped with extreme-scale turbines are statistically significant but negligible in magnitude.

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