Anti-Wind Power Study Kicks Up Storm In UK
This line of attack is similar to the one used in a controversial Bentek Energy study released last year. In what it called “the wind power paradox,” Bentek said its analysis showed that “when power plants on a regional power grid are ‘cycled’ to accept wind energy, the plants run less efficiently, leading to significant emissions and higher plant maintenance costs.”
The Bentek study was challenged by the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), which charged it was “directly contradicted by a large body of government data and numerous studies by independent grid operators conclusively showing that the emissions savings of adding wind energy to the grid are substantially larger than had been expected.” Among the study’s chief flaws, the AWEA said, was “that the authors used a method that takes very small snapshots of the power grid in both time and geographic space, and thus overlooks a large share of the emissions savings produced by wind energy.”

image via RWE npower renewables
Responding to the Civitas study, RenewableUK attacked the credibility and methodology of its primary sources. It said Gibson wrongly assumed that wind power would need to be backed up on a megawatt-for-megawatt basis by an expensive new fleet of rapid-response gas power stations (known as open-cycle gas turbines, or OCGT). “Dedicated OCGT plants are not required to provide back-up for wind,” Gordon Edge, RenewableUK’s director of policy, said in a statement. “Instead, wind can be integrated into our existing electricity system to act as a fuel saver, enabling us to harness the weather when it’s available. Some additional investment is required, but credible analysis puts the cost at one-sixth of Mr Gibson’s inflated claims even with wind providing two-thirds of our power.”
RenewableUK also said the Civitas report makes use of research that hasn’t been subject to peer review, a point also made by Guardian columnist Leo Hickman, whose reporting on the Civitas brouhaha includes a number of experts weighing in to savage the Civitas claims. For instance, Hickman quotes Robert Gross of the U.K. Energy Research Centre saying, “There is also a substantial consensus that the lifecycle carbon emissions associated with the construction and maintaining of wind power are very small compared to those of fossil fuel sources.”
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Anonymous
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http://profiles.google.com/goggin.michael Michael Goggin
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