A wind turbine’s “specific power” rating relates its capacity to the swept area of its rotor in terms of Watt per square meter. For a given generator capacity, specific power declines as rotor size increases. In land-rich but capacity-constrained wind power markets, such as the United States, developers have an economic incentive to maximize megawatt-hours per constrained megawatt, and so have favored turbines with ever-lower specific power. To date, this trend toward lower specific power has pushed capacity factors higher while reducing the levelized cost of energy. We employ geospatial levelized cost of energy analysis across the United States to explore whether this trend is likely to continue. We find that under reasonable cost scenario...
The economic and technical potential of wind energy in the United States is discussed. Particular at...
Wind generated electricity (WOE) is emerging as a13; serious choice for consideration while planning...
The cost of wind energy is a function of turbine size. Economies of scale are offset by a fundamenta...
The significant upscaling of wind turbine size (nameplate capacity, rotor diameter, and tower height...
The move to larger turbines has been observed in the United States and around the world. Turbine sca...
US wind power generation has grown significantly over the last decades, both in number and average s...
Wind turbines with Low Specific Power (LSP) are envisaged as one of the modern-day manifestations to...
Recent advancements in utility-scale wind turbine technology and pricing have vastly increased the p...
This paper investigates the marginal system value of increasing the penetration level of wind power,...
The rise in prices of traditional energy sources, the high dependence of many countries on their imp...
This paper provides an overview of wind-turbine development activities in the Unites States and rela...
Global wind resources greatly exceed current electricity demand and the levelized cost of energy fro...
Wind energy technology is evolving towards larger machines (longer blades, taller towers and more po...
The suitability of turbine configurations to different wind resources has been traditionally restric...
Many favorable wind energy resources in North America are located in remote locations without direct...
The economic and technical potential of wind energy in the United States is discussed. Particular at...
Wind generated electricity (WOE) is emerging as a13; serious choice for consideration while planning...
The cost of wind energy is a function of turbine size. Economies of scale are offset by a fundamenta...
The significant upscaling of wind turbine size (nameplate capacity, rotor diameter, and tower height...
The move to larger turbines has been observed in the United States and around the world. Turbine sca...
US wind power generation has grown significantly over the last decades, both in number and average s...
Wind turbines with Low Specific Power (LSP) are envisaged as one of the modern-day manifestations to...
Recent advancements in utility-scale wind turbine technology and pricing have vastly increased the p...
This paper investigates the marginal system value of increasing the penetration level of wind power,...
The rise in prices of traditional energy sources, the high dependence of many countries on their imp...
This paper provides an overview of wind-turbine development activities in the Unites States and rela...
Global wind resources greatly exceed current electricity demand and the levelized cost of energy fro...
Wind energy technology is evolving towards larger machines (longer blades, taller towers and more po...
The suitability of turbine configurations to different wind resources has been traditionally restric...
Many favorable wind energy resources in North America are located in remote locations without direct...
The economic and technical potential of wind energy in the United States is discussed. Particular at...
Wind generated electricity (WOE) is emerging as a13; serious choice for consideration while planning...
The cost of wind energy is a function of turbine size. Economies of scale are offset by a fundamenta...