PJ how big a town would 7MW turbine support?
I have no idea
It isnt that simple, you cant say that would power x amount of homes, it is fed into the grid. But currently about 10% of grid demand is from wind poweer in the UK.
PJ how big a town would 7MW turbine support?
I have no idea
The proposed site off Hornsea would generate enough power for 1m homes at full operating speed.
The entire project will see 174 turbines installed, so dividing that backwards - 1 will power approx 5,750 homes (as long as they don't all use their kettles)

It isnt that simple, you cant say that would power x amount of homes, it is fed into the grid. But currently about 10% of grid demand is from wind poweer in the UK.
"An onshore wind turbine with a capacity of 2.5 MW can produce more than 6 million kWh in a year - enough to supply 1,500 average EU households with electricity."
So scale that up and its about right, its a lot of kettles
The average kWh usage of a UK house is 4,100kWh
It isnt that simple, you cant say that would power x amount of homes, it is fed into the grid. But currently about 10% of grid demand is from wind poweer in the UK.
ok so you are talking peak times and non peak times and all that good stuff you get paid to think about but the rest of the world doesn't care out.
thats fine.
I've seen that link before.At any point you can log onto the national grid and see a real time
http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/
Who gets paid to think about what? I have no background in Electrical Engineering and a basic knowledge outside of my core feild of knowledge. But someone once highlighted.....research and reading make you a little more educated.
It's interesting that at the moment it is below 10%......the wind isnt blowing as much ;-)
At any point you can log onto the national grid and see a real time
http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/
Who gets paid to think about what? I have no background in Electrical Engineering and a basic knowledge outside of my core feild of knowledge. But someone once highlighted.....research and reading make you a little more educated.
It's interesting that at the moment it is below 10%......the wind isnt blowing as much ;-)
And.... the point originally was that it also makes jobs in the area maintaining said turbines.
what happens after 20 years? I'm sure the wind doesn't stop and the ground doesn't become unsuitable. Is it a total refit kind of discussion
"French Interconnector: This is a 2GW bi-directional link to France which (when fully operational, which is seldom) is able to import up to 2GW of power from France - usually in summer when France has a nuclear power surplus - and export in winter, when the UK's excess of backup plant and coal power can be profitably sold to meet continental shortfalls."
[HASHTAG]#ouch[/HASHTAG]
Depending on energy prices this could be bad/good
If you have a base for cheap renewable alternatives, energy storage, tidal etc then Arab and Russian price fluctuations become less of a problem
I glanced at that on sceptics guide online but nothing more

Not you. Maybe the post above ??Who are you talking to?![]()
