Wind power/Geography

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Revision as of 22:20, 29 March 2023 by Elie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "====Background knowledge==== From source: <cite>Factsheet - Wind energy - Center for sustainable systems - University of Michigan</cite> * <q>Average annual wind speeds of 6.5m/s or greater at 80m [altitude] are generally considered commercially viable.</q> * If wind turbines were everywhere, we'd generate far more raw power than we need: {{x|<q>Global onshore and offshore wind power potential at commercial turbine hub heights could provide 840,000 TWh of electricity ann...")
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Background knowledge

From source: Factsheet - Wind energy - Center for sustainable systems - University of Michigan

  • Average annual wind speeds of 6.5m/s or greater at 80m [altitude] are generally considered commercially viable.
  • If wind turbines were everywhere, we'd generate far more raw power than we need: (...)( Global onshore and offshore wind power potential at commercial turbine hub heights could provide 840,000 TWh of electricity annually. Total global electricity consumption from all sources in 2018 was about 23,398 TWh. ... ... Similarly, the annual continental U.S. wind potential of 68,000 TWh greatly exceeds annual U.S. electricity consumption of 3,802 TWh. )

But one question remains

Do the people live near the places that get a lot of wind?

TO DO: For better visualization, we should generate a new map that superimposes the two - and also shows (for scale) the maximum viable distance that electricity can transmitted.