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The model of a planned wind farm in the East China Sea is displayed at the Wind Power Science Museum in Shanghai.(Photo:China Daily) | BEIJING, May, 11 -- The Yangtze River Delta has
turned to wind power in its quest for cleaner energy, with Shanghai spearheading
the drive.
Last month, the eastern metropolis opened China's first wind-power science museum next to a cluster of huge three-blade wind turbines installed last year in the south of the city.
The two-storey museum, which shows how wind has been
used over the centuries to generate power, attracts an average of 100 visitors
per day, mostly students and tourists, according to employee Yan Meihong.
From the second floor, visitors can see eight of the
11 giant white wind turbines, each with a capacity of 1.5 megawatts (MW) and 65
metres tall, in nearby Forest Park.
The turbines, along with three in Chongming District,
can meet the electricity needs of 20,000 people.
Shanghai, one-third of whose power is imported, aims
to promote this clean energy even more, partly encouraged by the country's new
Renewable Energy Law.
The law requires major power companies to ensure that
at least 5 per cent of their generators are fuelled by renewable sources by
2010.
According to the National Development and Reform
Commission, the country's top economic planner, wind power facilities with a
total capacity of 30,000 MW will be built by 2020.
Most industry experts, however, believe the potential
is much higher.
"We want to add 10 similar turbines in Nanhui
District, and some bigger ones in Chongming District as well," said Hu Chuanyu,
a senior engineer of Shanghai Wind Power Co.
"But the global wind power market is so hot that we
are worried about where to find turbines."
Having worked in the wind power sector for 10 years,
Hu estimates that Shanghai alone has a potential onshore wind power capacity of
at least 3,000 MW.
That amount would meet the daily energy needs of
about 1.2 billion average Chinese homes.
Although that is only about 10 per cent of the city's
total demand, it is still significant for the city of Shanghai, which has a
population of more than 10 million and a power shortage of 10 million kilowatts.
The shortage equates to the power supplies of 2.5 million ordinary households.
At the estuary of the Yangtze River, Shanghai
benefits from both ocean salt and silt carried by it, creating large patches of
tidal land that are extending 100 metres a year on average.
"That makes it an ideal wind farm location, as tidal
land is accommodating enough to hold big windmills," said Hu.
A spacious flat place is also important for ensuring
steady wind speed, which is crucial for later power networking and facility
maintenance.
The coastal city also has a large untapped sea area
that is suitable for offshore wind turbine construction, a likely future trend
for wind farms as they take up no valuable land resources.
"Shanghai is planning a large offshore wind farm in
the East China Sea, which could be the first one in the country," said
Hu.Enditem
The proposed wind farm may even be located by the
East China Sea Bridge to fuel a new residential area to be constructed nearby.
But it is not an easy task to erect turbines at sea
in terms of cost, construction and technology.
"A single blade for a turbine can be as high as a
10-storey building. So imagine how much effort will be needed to erect scores of
turbines on the water," Hu said.
It would make the cost far higher than building
turbines on land, which already requires funding of about 20 per cent more than
that of a thermal power station.
And for a country such as China, which relies heavily
on imported turbines, it also means more sophisticated technology.
China began to follow the rest of the world in
manufacturing turbines in the 1970s, but still lags far behind, said Yuan
Guoqing, associate professor of Shanghai-based Tongji University's School of
Aerospace Engineering and Applied Mechanics.
The difficulty, he said, lies in the design of
turbine blades the most vital part of a turbine.
"They look simple, but involve multi-disciplines
including aerodynamics, materials and automation. Their costs account for
approximately one-third of the total of a turbine," Yuan said.
The most high-tech windmills, each with installed
capacities of more than 1.5 MW, are all equipped with variable speed turbines,
where blades can change angles and running speed against different winds to
produce more stable electric currents.
But China is still behind many other countries in the
technology, according to Yuan. He added that some domestic universities were
planning to set up wind power majors to train future turbine designers.
"We at Tongji University are also considering
establishing a wind power research centre someday," he said.
One inspiring development, however, is that an energy
research institute in Guangzhou is experimenting with a new turbine that adopts
maglev (magnetic levitation) technology, according to Hu.
It is said to be able to utilize winds at speeds of
just 2.5 metres per second, in comparison with the driving wind speed of more
than 3.5 metres per second needed for existing turbines.
China started wind farm construction in 1986, with
the first site in full operation in Rongcheng, a county in East China's Shandong
Province.
The Yangtze Delta, which boasts a long coastal line
with the potential to greatly benefit from wind power, trails somewhat behind
other areas, but has good future prospects.
Besides Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces have
also drawn up plans to develop the green energy.
In Dongtai, Jiangsu Province, a wind farm with a
total installed capacity of 200 MW is under construction. It is expected to be
completed in 2008, generating annual electricity of 400 million kilowatt hours.
Also in the province, the largest wind farm in Asia
is being built in Rudong, a city with an average onshore wind speed of 7 metres
per second.
With a planned installed capacity of 850 MW, the wind
farm will accommodate about 430 turbines, each with a capacity of 2 MW,
according to Zhao Shengxiao, an engineer with the Central China Investigation
and Design Institute, which carried out surveys in the area ahead of
construction.
The province hopes to possess one-fifth of the total
installed capacity of wind power in the country by 2010 by erecting more
turbines.
Hu said: "Jiangsu has geographical advantages, with
large plains, for instance. Its potential capacity of wind power along the coast
could be as much as 100 million kilowatts."
Zhejiang, although hindered by its mountainous and
compact geography, is also planning to make the most of its wind resources. One
of its island cities, Zhoushan, has proposed an offshore wind farm with an
installed capacity of 200 MW.
Statistics have shown that China has a total
potential wind power capacity of 1 billion kilowatts, with about 70 per cent
along the coast. Enditem
(Source: China Daily) |