A team of environmental scientists from Harvard and Tsinghua
University has demonstrated the enormous potential for wind-generated
electricity in China. Using extensive meteorological data and
incorporating the Chinese government’s energy-bidding and financial
restrictions for delivering wind power, the researchers estimate that
wind alone has the potential to meet the country’s electricity demands
projected for 2030.
The switch from coal and other fossil fuels to greener wind-based
energy could also mitigate CO2 emissions, thereby reducing pollution.
The report is being published as a cover story in tomorrow's edition of Science.
“The world is struggling with the question of how do you make the
switch from carbon-rich fuels to something carbon-free,” said lead
author Michael B. McElroy, Gilbert Butler Professor of Environmental Studies at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS).
China has become second only to the United States in its national
power-generating capacity — 792.5 gigawatts per year with an expected
future 10 percent annual increase — and is now the world’s largest CO2
emitter. Thus, added McElroy, “the real question for the globe is: What
alternatives does China have?”
While wind-generated energy accounts for only 0.4 percent of China’s
total current electricity supply, the country is rapidly becoming the
world’s fastest-growing market for wind power, trailing only the United
States, Germany, and Spain in terms of installed capacities of existing
wind farms.
Development of renewable energy in China, especially wind, received
an important boost with passage of the Renewable Energy Law in 2005;
the law provides favorable tax status for alternative energy
investments. The Chinese government also established a concession
bidding process to guarantee a reasonable return for large wind
projects.
“To determine the viability of wind-based energy for China we
established a location-based economic model, incorporating the bidding
process, and calculated the energy cost based on geography,” said
co-author Xi Lu, a graduate student in McElroy’s group at SEAS. “Using
the same model we also evaluated the total potentials for wind energy
that could be realized at a certain cost level.”
Specifically, the researchers used meteorological data from the
Goddard Earth Observing Data Assimilation System (GEOS) at NASA.
Further, they assumed the wind energy would be produced from a set of
land-based 1.5-megawatt turbines operating over non-forested, ice-free,
rural areas with a slope of no more than 20 percent.
“By bringing the capabilities of atmospheric science to the study of
energy we were able to view the wind resource in a total context,”
explained co-author Chris P. Nielsen, executive director of the Harvard China Project, based at SEAS.
The analysis indicated that a network of wind turbines operating at
as little as 20 percent of their rated capacity could provide
potentially as much as 24.7 petawatt-hours of electricity annually, or
more than seven times China’s current consumption. The researchers also
determined that wind energy alone, at around 7.6 U.S. cents per
kilowatt-hour, could accommodate the country’s entire demand for
electricity projected for 2030.
“Wind farms would only need to take up land areas of 0.5 million
square kilometers, or regions about three-quarters of the size of
Texas. The physical footprints of wind turbines would be even smaller,
allowing the areas to remain agricultural,” said Lu.
By contrast, to meet the increased demand for electricity during the
next 20 years using fossil fuel-based energy sources, China would have
to construct coal-fired power plants that could produce the equivalent
of 800 gigawatts of electricity, resulting in a potential increase of
3.5 gigatons of CO2 per year. The use of cleaner wind energy could both
meet future demands and, even if only used to supplement existing
energy sources, significantly reduce carbon emissions.
Moving to a low-carbon energy future would require China to make an
investment of around $900 billion (at current prices) over the same
20-year period. The scientists consider this a large but not
unreasonable investment given the present size of the Chinese economy.
Moreover, whatever the energy source, the country will need to build
and support an expanded energy grid to accommodate the anticipated
growth in power demand.
“We are trying to cut into the current defined demand for new
electricity generation in China, which is roughly a gigawatt a week —
or an enormous 50 gigawatts per year,” said McElroy. “China is bringing
on several coal-fire power plants a week. By publicizing the
opportunity for a different way to go we will hope to have a positive
influence.”
In the coming months, the researchers plan to conduct a more
intensive wind study in China, taking advantage of 25-year data with
significantly higher spatial resolution for north Asian regions to
investigate the geographical year-to-year variations of wind. The model
used for assessing China could also be applied for assessing wind
potential anywhere in the world, onshore and offshore, and could be
extended to solar-generated electricity.
Yuxuan Wang, associate professor in the Department of Environmental
Science and Engineering at Tsinghua University in Beijing, also
contributed to the study. The team’s research was supported by a grant
from the National Science Foundation (NSF).