Ocean Wind Power Maps Reveal Possible Wind Energy Sources

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July 9, 2008

Steve Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx

Alan Buis/Diya Chacko
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-0474/393-5464
alan.buis@xxxxxxxxxxxx, diya.s.chacko@xxxxxxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-170

OCEAN WIND POWER MAPS REVEAL POSSIBLE WIND ENERGY SOURCES

WASHINGTON -- Efforts to harness the energy potential of Earth's ocean 
winds could soon gain an important new tool: global satellite maps 
from NASA. Scientists have been creating maps using nearly a decade 
of data from NASA's QuikSCAT satellite that reveal ocean areas where 
winds could produce wind energy.

The new maps have many potential uses including planning the location 
of offshore wind farms to convert wind energy into electric energy. 
The research, published this week in Geophysical Research Letters, 
was funded by NASA's Earth Science Division, which works to advance 
the frontiers of scientific discovery about Earth, its climate and 
its future.

"Wind energy is environmentally friendly. After the initial energy 
investment to build and install wind turbines, you don't burn fossil 
fuels that emit carbon," said study lead author Tim Liu, a senior 
research scientist and QuikSCAT science team leader at NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "Like solar power, wind 
energy is green energy."

QuikSCAT, launched in 1999, tracks the speed, direction and power of 
winds near the ocean surface. Data from QuikSCAT, collected 
continuously by a specialized microwave radar instrument named 
SeaWinds, also are used to predict storms and enhance the accuracy of 
weather forecasts.

Wind energy has the potential to provide 10 to 15 percent of future 
world energy requirements, according to Paul Dimotakis, chief 
technologist at JPL. If ocean areas with high winds were tapped for 
wind energy, they could potentially generate 500 to 800 watts of 
energy per square meter, according to Liu's research. Dimotakis notes 
that while this is slightly less than solar energy (which generates 
about one kilowatt of energy per square meter), wind power can be 
converted to electricity more efficiently than solar energy and at a 
lower cost per watt of electricity produced.

According to Liu, new technology has made floating wind farms in the 
open ocean possible. A number of wind farms are already in operation 
worldwide. Ocean wind farms have less environmental impact than 
onshore wind farms, whose noise tends to disturb sensitive wildlife 
in their immediate area. Also, winds are generally stronger over the 
ocean than on land because there is less friction over water to slow 
the winds down - there are no hills or mountains to block the wind's 
path.

Ideally, offshore wind farms should be located in areas where winds 
blow continuously at high speeds. The new research identifies such 
areas and offers explanations for the physical mechanisms that 
produce the high winds. 

An example of one such high-wind mechanism is located off the coast of 
Northern California near Cape Mendocino. The protruding land mass of 
the cape deflects northerly winds along the California coast, 
creating a local wind jet that blows year-round. Similar jets are 
formed from westerly winds blowing around Tasmania, New Zealand, and 
Tierra del Fuego in South America, among other locations. Areas with 
large-scale, high wind power potential also can be found in regions 
of the mid-latitudes of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, where winter 
storms normally track.

The new QuikSCAT maps, which add to previous generations of QuikSCAT 
wind atlases, also will be beneficial to the shipping industry by 
highlighting areas of the ocean where high winds could be hazardous 
to ships, allowing them to steer clear of these areas.

Scientists use the QuikSCAT data to examine how ocean winds affect 
weather and climate, by driving ocean currents, mixing ocean waters, 
and affecting the carbon, heat and water interaction between the 
ocean and the atmosphere.

JPL manages QuikSCAT for NASA. For more information about QuikSCAT, 
visit:

http://winds.jpl.nasa.gov

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
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