Battery used Battery charging

Small Windmills Put to the Test

Wind power rules, but commercially available small windmills are a swindle.

Image: Small wind turbines in a test in the Netherlands. Credit: Jeroen Haringman.
Image: Small wind turbines in a test in the Netherlands. Credit: Jeroen Haringman.
View original image View dithered image

A real-world test performed by the Dutch province of Zeeland (a very windy place) confirms our earlier analysis that small windmills are a fundamentally flawed technology (test results here, pdf in Dutch). Twelve of these much hyped machines were placed in a row on an open plain (picture above). Their energy yield was measured over a period of one year (April 1, 2008 - March 31, 2009), the average wind velocity during these 12 months was 3.8 meters per second (note: update on the wind speed ). Three windmills broke. Find the disappointing results of the others below.

Small Wind Turbines

  • Energy Ball v100 (4,304 euro) : 73 kWh per year, corresponding to an average output of 8.3 watts
  • Ampair 600 (8,925 euro) : 245 kWh per year or an average output of 28 watts
  • Turby (21,350 euro) : 247 kWh per year or an average output of 28.1 watts
  • Airdolphin (17,548 euro) : 393 kWh per year or an average output of 44.8 watts
  • WRE 030 (29,512 euro) : 404 kWh per year or an average output of 46 watts
  • WRE 060 (37,187 euro) : 485 kWh per year or an average output of 55.4 watts
  • Passaat (9,239 euro) : 578 kWh per year or an average output of 66 watts-
  • Skystream (10,742 euro) : 2,109 kWh per year or an average power output of 240.7 watts
  • Montana (18,508 euro) : 2,691 kWh per year or an average power output of 307 watts.

Keep in mind that these windmills would perform considerably worse in a built-up area.

47 windmills to power a household

An average Dutch household consumes 3,400 kWh/year. Listed below is the amount of windmills required, and their total cost, to power a Dutch household entirely using wind energy:

  • Energy Ball : 47 windmills (202,288 euro)
  • Ampair : 14 windmills (124,950 euro)
  • Turby : 14 windmills (298,900 euro)
  • Airdolphin : 9 windmills (157,932 euro)
  • WRE 030 : 9 windmills (265,608 euro)
  • WRE 060: 7 windmills (260,309 euro)
  • Passaat : 6 windmills (55,434 euro)
  • Skystream : 2 windmills (21,484 euro)
  • Montana : 2 windmills (37,016 euro)

An average American household consumes almost 3 times more electricity than a Dutch household. Simply multiply the above figures by three.

Rotor diameter

At first sight, the results seem to indicate that the design of the windmill matters. However, if you combine these figures with the rotor diameter, it becomes clear that the concept of small windmills is fundamentally flawed. The turbines that score best, are simply the largest ones:

  • Energy Ball : 1 meter
  • Ampair : 1.7 meter
  • Turby : 2 meter
  • Airdolphin: 1.8 meter
  • WRE 030 : 2.5 meter
  • WRE 060 : 3.3 meter
  • Passaat : 3.12 meter
  • Skystream : 3.7 meter
  • Montana : 5 meters

Windmills with a rotor diameter of 4 or 5 meters do not fit on most roofs, and are not easy to integrate in a built-up environment.

Size matters

Close to the test site stands a (relatively) large windmill with a rotor diameter of 18 meters. It delivers 143,000 kWh per year, or an average power output of 16,324 watts. It can power 42 Dutch households. This large windmill costs only slightly more than all small windmills combined (17 percent more, to be exact, or 190,000 euro), but it delivers almost 20 times more energy. This comes down to 4,523 euro per household.

Wind power rules, but commercially available small windmills are a swindle. Bigger is, in this case, better.

A longer version of this article can be found at The Oil Drum.

Reactions

To make a comment, please send an e-mail to solar (at) lowtechmagazine (dot) com. Your e-mail address is not used for other purposes, and will be deleted after the comment is published. If you don’t want your real name to be published, sign the e-mail with the name you want to appear.

Reactions
Talco

I’d like to know who funded this test. With an average wind speed of only 8.5 MPH no wonder the output was maginal. In most cases a small turbine would not be installed in average wind speeds below 12 MPH. Looks like somebody is trying to give the small wind industry a bad name, could it be the utility comanies???

kdd

Kevin, the wind speeds at a height of 80 meters are completely irrelevant here. You don’t have to convince me of the potential of large windmills, I agree with you on that.

We are talking about small windmills. The figures you link to, confirm that the potential of these machines is very limited. Of course, there are places in the world where you have sufficient wind speeds at a height of 10 meters, but not where most of us live.

Contrary to large windmills, mini wind turbines have to be placed right next to where your house is standing. So these “Class 3” locations you are referring to are of not much use. What counts, is the average wind speed in our cities and towns, where we live. You live on a sailboat, roaming the Caribbean. Most of us, unfortunately, not.

You make one very good point, though: energy conservation is a way to deal with the limited energy output of these machines. If you live a low-tech life, a small windmill combined with a solar panel can give you all the power you need.

Zem

Talco - or is it reporting the facts … Do you work for one of the companies that makes the small windmills maybe? :^)

Ave 12mph wind … man I’d hate to live there!

These windmills are designed for urban areas right?? I would love to see them out perform larger designs, cost little and run forever, but they don’t (yet?) so we’re stuck with large farms in minimally inhabited areas.

Brian Miles

These results are not shocking. As the previous commenter stated an 8.5 MPH average wind speed is a marginal resource. That said, some of the turbines, for example the Skystream did quite well, and exactly as Southwest Wind’s power curve predicts. Buying one of these turbines to offset 50% of a Dutch household’s electricity use would make sense if the cost of electricity were high enough.

mrsteed

All the little birdies slaughtered oh the shame. What horrors for little birdies at that place.

Tom Hogarty

This report has blown away my idea of, one day, having a windmill installed in our back garden. The results are remarkable, especially seeing that smaller is really less efficient, something I suspected all along.

Whatever about any potential bias and variances that we haven’t seen in the English only summary, the test was an excellent project and the presentation of the results extremely clear.

Thank you and well done on to all involved.

Dennis

The report is misleading. It should talk about the average power produced as X watts, saying it is continuous is misrepresenting an intermitent power source. There will have been days when no power was produced.

Mark Durrenberger

Once you understand the physics of a turbine, you see that small machines are only for show. The power output of a turbine is directly proportional to the swept area. However, when you double the radius of a turbine, you increase the swept area by a factor of four. And doubling the radius does not double the cost. Bigger is better.

Byz

The problem here is not the efficiency of the small windmills but the cost of the windmills compared to the power output. Until there is a significant drop in the cost of these machines they will not be a viable option for most people. It is important to note that many people are building their own small windmills from scrap parts for very little money and getting decent results.

llm

“Until there is a significant drop in the cost of these machines they will not be a viable option for most people.”

But this won’t be the case if petroleum (and energy in general) becomes more expensive.

Higher energy costs => More expensive to manufacture, install, and maintain.

Kevin L. Hughes

I apologize for the sarcasm, and do not disagree totally with the viewpoint of the article, only it’s spirit.

Wind energy is a viable resource most everywhere, and needs to be utilized to it’s fullest potential because of its clean nature.

The following link provides a basic mapping of average wind speeds for the whole planet, excluding Antarctica (which is by far the windiest place on earth):

http://www.stanford.edu/group/efmh/winds/global_winds.html

My US data came from:

http://www.met.utah.edu/jhorel/html/wx/climate/windavg.html

published by Dr. John Horel, Mesoscale Analysis Committee Co-chair, National Weather Service, Office of Science and Technology and the Director of the NOAA Cooperative Institute for Regional Prediction, University of Utah. Pretty much, a guy that should know wind.

If you average only the seven windiest months of the cities on this list, well over 200 of them have higher wind speeds than the test site in the Netherlands.

True, Europe isn’t as blessed as other locations, but there is enough wind to go for it using the big boys in appropriate places.

Colin

According to this article (published half way theough the trial) they had expected wind speeds to be around 6 m/s average. In end it turned out to be about half that.

http://www.newenergyfocus.com/do/ecco.py/view_item?listid=1&listcatid=105&listitemid=1877

Julian Patrick

I tend to agree that his must be funded by someone who has a reason to give micro-wind a bad name. The windspeed on this site is simply too low. It is the equivelant of putting solar pv panels under a tree!

It is the industry standard to never install a turbine on a site with an annual average windspeed of less than 5 m/s as a minimum. The power available in the wind is proportional to a square of the speed so if you install in a low wind speed area you are wasting your money. There will be no environmental or economic benefits whatsoever.

The only reason a local turbine would do well would be if it was on a much taller mast and therefore experience higher wind speeds.

Microwind does work, we see paybacks under 5 years! You just have to make sure you get good advice and use an accredited installer.

Walter
  • DELTA NV (gas, electricity, solar, internet, tv, water)

  • Provincie Zeeland (government)

are funders of this research. I am not sure about the Provincie Zeeland, but Delta is the owner of a nucleair plant in Zeeland, and they want to build another one….they sure are not fans of windenergy!

Kevin l. Hughes

Kris, you are skewing the data a bit, " . . . worldwide average wind speed at a height of 10 meters . . . " is not an important piece of data. Who cares if the “average” number of batteries/square-foot in a room is .004 when I only need two for my flashlight?

You might have missed this in the summary:

“Assuming that statistics generated from all stations analyzed here are representative of the global distribution of winds, global wind power generated at locations with mean annual wind speeds ≥ 6.9 m/s at 80 m is found to be ~72 TW (~54,000 Mtoe) for the year 2000. Even if only ~20% of this power could be captured, it could satisfy 100% of the world’s energy demand for all purposes (6995-10177 Mtoe) and over seven times the world’s electricity needs (1.6-1.8 TW). Several practical barriers need to be overcome to fully realize this potential.”

This is, of course, utilizing wind turbines at appropriate heights.

Concerning the 10-meter measurements, what we are interested in for ‘small’ wind turbines, is wind velocity greater than 6 m/s; therefore we are interested in stations defined as “class 3’” or above, because:

“Mean velocity for class ≥ 3 stations (AT 10-METER HEIGHT!) = 6.53 m/s”

“Approximately 12.3% of all stations worldwide belong to class 3 or greater (i.e., annual mean wind speed ≥ 6.9 m/s at 10 m) and are therefore suitable for wind power generation. This estimate is conservative . . . "

—–this is 12.3% of 8321 stations worldwide—-

" . . . Europe and North America have the greatest number of stations in class = 3 (307 and 453, respectively), whereas Oceania and Antarctica have the greatest percentage (21 and 60%, respectively). Areas with strong wind power potential were found in Northern Europe along the North Sea, the southern tip of the South American continent, the island of Tasmania in Australia, the Great Lakes region, and the northeastern and western coasts of Canada and the United States.”

Regardless of the potential at 80-meters, there are MANY places where MANY people can do as I do and live ENTIRELY on wind & solar generated electricity at only FOUR METERS ABOVE SEA LEVEL! The proof is in the pudding, Kris, and I have been doing it for ten years over the course of a 15,000 mile journey (thus surviving in MANY locations with my lighting, refrigeration, navigation, computing, 2000-watt sound system, and all-electric galley [microwave, rice cooker, toaster oven, griddle, & electric fry pan]).

One is invited to go to and download the entire 10-page report. LOTS of math, informative graphs, and pretty pictures of the wind velocities across the globe.

p.s. I have sent an emailio to Dr. Horel to discover his data gathering methodology; I will post any response I receive.

p.p.s. I obviously enjoy your magazine and find MANY topics relevant, for example: I was anchored next to the Maltese Falcon last month at Jost Van Dyke, BVI (did you know it is for sale?); and discovered last week that the VLA telescope on St. Croix, USVI, where I am currently staying, uses “Sneakernet” to collect the data from its ten radio astronomy locations.

Very cool stuff, but we can agree to disagree, no? ;-] (don’t get me started on the electric car issue . . .)

DanFoster

Why do people always think they need a windmill in their house? The idea that they would never work in urban areas is a mute point - we have something called high voltage power lines. Build the mindmills in windy areas, transform the voltage and put it into the grid. Don’t even bother trying to put windmills where you happen to live - go looking for a good place to put them.

The idea that small windmills are useless may not be true. Its a simple exercise in math. Work out your up front and maintainance costs, and work out what wind speed you will need on average for it to break even over a reasonable period of time, given a reasonable cost of energy.

I have a 2.5m 500W windmill on a property directly on the beach (not my property, but they let me use it because they interested). It cost me just $650US for the windmill and another $200US for a grid inverter. But I installed it myself. I would say I did $500US of work in total. The power company had to hook it up for free to the grid, which is paid for by a goverment bonus grant thing for green energy.

I luckily have a position on the slope of a hill in a fjord that is almost constaly 10 to 15 m/s and is about 50m above sea level. The generator makes 200W at 8m/s and upto 500W at 12m/S, and can max out at 600W at over 15m/s in storms. So far in the first 3 months I have pulled in 650kw-hours. I get paid about 31 US cents per kilowatt hour because its green energy, my first months check was about $190US. At this rate it will pay for itself in about 18 months.

However not everyone is as lucky. If the average wind speed was only about 8m/s I would probably only pull in 100kw-hours instead of 600. If the goverment doesn’t pay you for green power, you might only get 10 cents per kilowatt hour, instead of 30 cents. If that was all true it would probably take 20+ years to get pay off (I doupt it windmill would last more than 4-5 years without having to spend on parts, new blades are about $100 US each).

MArtin

Basically bigger is better, which we all kind of knew anyway. Tell that to these campaigning morons who object to them because they damage the scenery… Huge campaigns in Scotland to NOT have windfarms. Each of them should be strapped to the arm of a giand windmill for a few days to help power it - with their hot air and arm flapping.

Fred

I have constructed and owned large wind farms for almost 30 years in California. I have no economic interest in small wind but thought I might add a comment here.

As a previous commentator mentions, there is an exponential increase in the power of the wind as its velocity increases. All windmills need a wind of at least 14mph (6.25mps) to achieve rated ouput. Many need more. The issue is not the average wind at a site, rather how many hours of wind exceeds 13mph. It is the higher winds which produce power. That is why the earlier comment that the more batteries the better for home use is correct. Charge them in high wind, use the power in calm or low wind times.

Second, the array of small windmills is appropriately designed if the wind is unidirectional as it is in Palm Springs California, where I operate my windmills. If the direction from which the wind blows varies significantly and blows much in a direction parallel to the array, the windmills will mask wind from each other and the downwind windmills will receive great and damaging turbulence.

kris de decker

“The issue is not the average wind at a site, rather how many hours of wind exceeds 13mph”

I think the former is a good indication of the latter, no?

“If the direction from which the wind blows varies significantly and blows much in a direction parallel to the array, the windmills will mask wind from each other and the downwind windmills will receive great and damaging turbulence.”

Winds in that area of the Netherlands are predominantly south-west.

Kris De Decker

The Oil Drum runs an extended and rewritten version of this article - including additional tests results from the UK.

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6954

Brian Barghout

I would like to respectfully disagree with the broad sweeping statement that small windmills are a fundementally flawed technology, and I will detail below a different perspective on this issue:

  1. maintenence. Depending on the quality of the parts used, the working life will vary, For example at my factory Barplas we carry out scheduled maintence and keep a history of when parts need changing. Its often the case that a part may cost 2 to 3 times more than a comparable part, but have 5 times the working life. Add to this the downtime to replace the parts and the labour and this is the real cost. ie, certain parts may be cheap in the short term and more expensive in the long term This needs to be analysed properly before a decision is made.

  2. Regarding the costs of windmills as stated in the article. I feel obliged to point out that with my experience of living in Asia that the costs of Windmills in Europe and the USA are about 5 to 10 times the costs of getting the same spec machines from China or other far east sources. Ultimately, the parasitical nature of Goverment duties, import taxes etc, has be held to account. We either pollute our planet to death, by falsely hiking up prices of alternative energy sources, or else start dealing with the true and much more economical prices of Windmills. I’m not trying to sell windmills from asia here but I can tell you that when I compared prices in the UK to the prices in China there was a 10 fold increase in price. Also some of the Windmills were Chinese but re-branded.

  3. I follow that a Dutch house hold uses 3,400 kWh/year and an avereage American household consumes almost 3 times more electricity than a Dutch household. But please don’t forget that millions, if not billions of people in third world countries would love to have just 100 watts per household, so that they have a little light and security at night, and for their children to study with a light bulb instead of a candle or an oil wick. Let’s not deny all of these people the technology for a small windmill based on the fact that we in the west need big ones for ourselves.

  4. Again regarding costs. We’ve built Windmills in Beirut, and run a small garden center from it. Without going into lots of details, I just want to mention, as I believe one of the other comentors here has, that we built it from scrap.

In closing, I would say say is that there will be a place for many different solutions, Big, Medium, and Small Windmills. the determining factor will be the eventual location/country and the actual users (first world heavy users vs third world light users)

I also think there should be very heavy pressure on our goverments to have zero duty on Windmills and other alternative energy sources because its a joke when the duty, and taxes end up with a 5 to 10 fold difference in the price of the technology. (Although I’ll admit that some companies have to bear some of the blame as they are demanding a big profit margin out of sheer greed)

Brian Barghout

sanveer

Small Windmills are inefficient, for many reasons:

  1. Windmill companies, have become like the Standard Oil companies. Huge monopolistic behemoths. They are one of the reasons, why good quality dynamos are not available, at affordable prices.

  2. Most people who construct cheap windmills, Only understand a small portion of the dynamics, of windpower. They are unable to tap, even a fraction, of the wind energy, of big (and expensive) windmills.

  3. Most of the DIYs, on windmills, only deal with how to make a windmill, and Not, how to increase the output of the dynamo.

As, a matter of fact, since most smaller windmills are much lighter, they should have faster moving parts, and should require lesser wind, to move them. Also, the scope of dealing with ergonomics, and wind-mill design, is far greater, in smaller windmills.

Only, if people didn’t get fooled, by all the wind-energy generating companies.

Bas Groot

The report itself is even more misleading than the article already suggests (I’m dutch so I can read it).

On the one hand it says that in one of the windiest outposts of one of the windiest countries in Europe, the wind 50% of the time just doesn’t blow hard enough at a 12m pole to get a small wind mill going at all!

In other words, it’s just not gonna work. Mere physics.

This brings the scientist to a surprising conclusion: let’s pump more R&D subsidies in it, so that the pysically impossible becomes possible. And these wind mill companies stay afloat. Again: says a scientist!

Keith Cockburn

A lot of these comments and indeed the artical entirely missed the important point that most of the energy generated by wind power is wasted. Not going round at the right speed to generate 50/60 Hz and 250v or whatever multiple is the most limiting factor. Home units and indeed the one I am planning for my workshop can be variable speed and make use of suplus enery as heat (it is ussually coldest when the wind is blowing hard). Not to mention energy harvesting and having the blades at the most efficient speed. I am for more scientific investigation. Keith Cockburn for Calenterprises