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Germany building the world’s first wind turbines with built-in hydroelectric capability

By Paul Dvorak | November 8, 2016

Engineers in Germany are storing water for hydroelectricity inside wind turbines have the towers act as a power storage device once the wind stops blowing. It’s the first major example of the two technologies being physically integrated to supply reliable renewable energy.

The four-turbine project, announced by General Electric this month, stores energy from the spinning blades by pumping water about 100 feet up inside the turbine structure itself. Basins around each base will store another 9 million gallons. When the wind stops, water flows downhill to generate hydroelectric power. A man-made lake in the valley below collects water until turbines pump the water back up again.

At full capacity, it should produce 13.6 megawatts, along with another 16 megawatts from the hydroelectric plant.

At full capacity, the project should produce 13.6 megawatts, along with another 16 megawatts from the hydroelectric plant.

Typically, wind farms don’t store excess energy. When it is excess, power goes straight to the grid (driving energy prices into low or even negative (!) territory), or the turbines are shut down. The project creates an affordable way to store excess energy in a natural reservoir, and integrates the source and storage into one system.

The wind farm in Germany’s Swabian-Franconian forest will feature the tallest turbines in the world at 809 feet (246.5 meters). (GE 3.4 MW turbine with 134-m diameter rotors) At full capacity, it should produce 13.6 megawatts, along with another 16 megawatts from the hydroelectric capability. The project is being built by German firm Max Boegl Wind AG and GE Renewable Energy. The wind farm should connect to the grid by 2017. The hydropower units will be finished by the end of 2018.

Germany is in the midst of its energiewende, or energy transition, as it attempts to virtually eliminate fossil fuels. The nation has said it aims to draw 45% of its energy from renewables by 2030 and reach 100% by 2050. Last year, the average renewable mix was 33%, reports Agora Energiewende, a German clean energy think tank.

GE says this wind farm is the first major project that integrates water storage in the turbines themselves, although there are a few examples of combined wind and pumped-water storage in the world. If successful, it should prove to be a template for other projects. Boegl says it plans to add one to two new more wind-hydro projects in Germany annually after 2018, and new sites may be found the around the world as the technology can use either fresh and saltwater.

 


Filed Under: News, Projects
Tagged With: GE, Germany
 

About The Author

Paul Dvorak

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