Ubergeekian
Well-Known Member
I saw an interesting comment from one of the windfarm consultants. According to his figures which were dated from June 2008 if you add up all wind power in service (3,625MW), under construction (850MW) and consented (3,067MW) then that comes to 5% of the UK demand (assuming 30% return). Elsewhere the document suggested that you could contribute up to 10% without too many problems in the grid.
I wonder what that figures would be now? A lot of turbines have gone up since then, and a lot more entered planning. It seems likely that we could soon be hitting that 10%.
Currently 4GW installed and another 8GW in construction or with planning permission. All that should be on-stream in two years or so.
From memory, we use about 400TWh per annum. Assuming the usual 35% output factor, 4GW is 12.8TWh (3.2%) and 12GW is 36.8TWh (9.2%).
There is about 1.5GW of installed capacity in large scale hydro power, so with the 35% factor wind is level pegging at the moment and should soon be well ahead.
As I write this, by the way, UK electricity demand is 34.8GW, so if it's nice and windy (but not too windy) out there we could be running on about 11.5% wind generated as it is.
References:
http://www.bwea.com/media/news/articles/pr20091020.html
http://www.nationalgrid.com/uk/Electricity/Data/Realtime/Demand/Demand60.htm