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Wind turbines generate electricity at an annual average rate of 25%–35% of their capacity.<ref>https://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/eia923/</ref> | Wind turbines generate electricity at an annual average rate of 25%–35% of their capacity.<ref>https://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/eia923/</ref> | ||
That means, for example, a 2-MW turbine may produce an annual total energy of 2 MW × 365 days × 24 hours × 0.25 = 4,380 MWh. | That means, for example, a 2-MW turbine may produce an annual total energy of 2 MW × 365 days × 24 hours × 0.25 = 4,380 MWh, or at an average rate of 2 MW × 0.25 = 0.5 MW. | ||
The turbine, or any group of turbines, generates at or above its average rate (i.e., its capacity factor) only 40% of the time.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=44</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=42</ref> When wind turbines do generate power, they do so at highly variable rates depending primarily on the wind speed.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=43</ref> | The turbine, or any group of turbines, generates at or above its average rate (i.e., its capacity factor), however, only 40% of the time.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=44</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=42</ref> When [[Wind turbine|wind turbines]] do generate power, they do so at highly variable rates depending primarily on the wind speed.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=43</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=883</ref> | ||
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==Capacity value== | ==Capacity value== | ||
Grid operators have to be able to call on the various generating plants as needed to meet demand. The ability to do so can be expressed as a plant’s ''capacity value'', the percentage of time that it can be called on to provide power to the grid. | Grid operators have to be able to call on the various generating plants as needed to meet demand. The ability to do so can be expressed as a plant’s ''capacity value'', the percentage of time that it can be called on to provide power to the grid. It is a measure of dispatchability. The capacity value of most power plants is effectively 100%. | ||
Wind turbines can not be “called on” except by the wind, which has only a random relationship to user demand for electricity.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=494</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=493</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=660</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=73</ref> Therefore, their capacity value is effectively zero. This means that to meet the needs of the grid, other – dispatchable – sources have to be maintained and built | Wind turbines, however, can not be “called on” except by the wind, which has only a random relationship to user demand for electricity.<ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=494</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=493</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=660</ref><ref>https://wind-watch.org/pix/displayimage.php?pid=73</ref> Therefore, their capacity value is effectively zero. This means that to meet the needs of the grid, other – dispatchable – sources have to be maintained and built just as if wind turbines were not on the grid. | ||
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