The group will collaborate on an in-depth wind feasibility study, which will further expand the groundwork for understanding the potential for utility-scale wind development in a region that has thus far remained almost entirely untapped.
A longstanding reputation for low wind resources in comparison to the rest of the US has led many developers to overlook the Southeast as a potential site for commercial wind energy projects. However, as turbine and resource mapping technologies improve, interest in the region is starting to increase.
“The Southeast is poised for considerable wind energy growth” said Pascal Storck, Global Manager of Energy Services at Vaisala. “However, before utilities and developers can start to make the most of the region’s wind potential, the industry needs to provide these would-be investors with access to trusted, reliable data. That includes comprehensive resource assessment that demonstrates the viability and longevity of southeastern wind energy as an investment proposition.”
Marc Tye, Santee Cooper’s Executive Vice President of Competitive Markets and Generation added that a rigorous assessment of wind energy potential in the Southeast will be able to provide a better evaluation of the case for investment in the region. By combining the capabilities and strengths of all involved, this feasibility study could ultimately lay the foundation for wind energy growth that offers economic benefits to industry, utilities, and residents alike.
In recent years, according to the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), SEWC, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), taller towers, longer blades, and improved electronics have significantly increased turbine output and efficiency and expanded the areas where wind energy projects are not only feasible but also profitable. Some projections for the next five-to-10 years indicate rapid growth in the Southeast, building on the success of an already well-established wind industry supply chain in the region. In order to further evaluate this growth and mobilize the development of utility-scale wind projects in the Southeast, the industry requires access to high-quality wind resource data as a basis for crucial project siting decisions and to complete financial modeling.
Vaisala’s wind feasibility study, supported by Southern Company, Santee Cooper, and the SEWC, will provide such access by creating a wind resource database of the Southeast, which will be available to coalition members, as well as a wind resource map at high altitudes, which will be publically available.
Vaisala will install a fleet of its Triton Wind Profilers in key locations in the Southeast to collect quality-controlled data at the hub-heights of modern turbines. The Triton mobile remote sensing unit is well suited for this project, since it can be rapidly deployed without the permits required by tall towers and captures wind information at heights up to 200 meters using state-of-the-art SoDAR technology.
A 12-month measurement campaign will be followed by a high-resolution spatial analysis of the project area conducted by Vaisala 3TIER Services, the company’s consulting arm. This will then be validated and corrected by the Triton field data as well as other measurement data provided by coalition members.
Vaisala is an expert in wind measurement, project assessment, and energy forecasting. The company supports customers by providing efficient, reliable, and profitable electrical energy systems around the globe with a wide range of measurement, assessment, forecasting, and asset management products and services.
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