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updated 18th November 05
By 4ecotips
UK has best
wind in Europe
A new report by the Environmental
Change Institute at Oxford University
shows that the UK has the best wind
resource in Europe. The report, commissioned
by the Department of Trade and Industry,
analysed hourly wind speeds collected
by the Met Office at 66 locations
across the UK since the 1970, making
it the most extensive research of
the UK's wind resource to date.
BWEA head of grid and technical affairs,
Richard Ford, says: "This report
confirms what the industry has long
known about the quality of the UK's
wind resource. Our colleagues in Europe
are perplexed that given this abundant
natural resource - a strategic energy
source as important as North Sea oil
- this country has been slow to install
turbines to harness the power of the
wind.
With this evidence, there should now
be no doubt at all about wind's ability
to play a reliable role in the new
power portfolio, and fullfil its promise
to generate significant amounts of
carbon-free electricity for the UK.
The UK is starting to catch up with
our EU partners, who have been enjoying
the benefits of this clean energy
source for many years now, including
thousands of jobs and increased energy
security, despite not having this
quality of wind."
Among the findings of the independent
analysis, the first methodical investigation
of Britain's wind resource, are that
there has never been a time over the
past 35 years when the entire country
has been without wind, and that the
wind always blows strongly enough
to generate electricity somewhere
in Britain. The study also showed
that wind tends to blow more strongly
when demand is highest, during the
day and winter months.
Furthermore, the chance of low wind
speeds affecting 90% of the country
only occur for one hour every five
years, whilst the chance of wind turbines
shutting down due to very high wind
speeds only occurs in around one hour
every ten years. Other findings concluded
that the wind conditions in the UK
are very different from those experienced
in Denmark and Germany, making wind
power a very real option and opportunity
for the UK, as the country has 'the
right kind of wind'.
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