Sustainability Assessment of Towers for Wind Turbines

University essay from Luleå/Department of Civil, Environmental and Natural Resources Engineering

Author: Josep Pigem Rodeja; [2012]

Keywords: ;

Abstract: The increasing world energy demand during last few decades has led wind power
installed capacity to a significant growth. Wind power is a renewable resource, which
means using it will not deplete the earth's supply of fossil fuels. It is also a clean energy
source, and operation does not produce carbon dioxide or any other type of air pollution,
as do conventional fossil fuel power sources.
However, there is an environmental impact associated dominantly during the
production and dismantling. During manufacture of the wind turbine, steel, concrete and
other materials will have to be made and transported using energy-intensive processes,
generally using fossil energy sources.
Several studies demonstrate that among the different parts conforming a wind plant,
tower+foundation are the most energy intensive components.
A sustainability assessment of a “virtual” tower for wind turbines, 100m hub height
with a assumed 3.6 MW capacity wind turbine is made focusing on the embodied CO2
equivalent emissions and energy consumed in production and execution of the towers. A
comparison between the two most common types of tower is done: tubular steel tower and
prestressed concrete tower. Data on generation of electrical energy from the wind power is
evaluated for various countries and simple assessment is made to get estimation of the
equivalent CO2 per MW·h of produced electricity.
Load tables are commonly provided by the turbine producers when a specific tower
design is made. However, a single horizontal force at the hub height is used as an
approximation of an equivalent characteristic load for ultimate limit state. Fatigue damage
is assessed in the same way decreasing the considered load by a reasonable factor.

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