July 14, 2006
Norse strong winds
blow clean energy
Arctic Norway provides
renewable example for Arctic Canada
JANE
GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
This
wind tower, one of 16 at the Arctic Wind Park near Halvøysund, Norway,
is an impressive 80 metres high.
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HAVØYSUND, NORWAY
- The Arctic has more than enough wind for anyone -and 16 wind turbines in Havøygavlen's
Arctic Wind Park are producing clean energy from this plentiful natural resource,
much like Nunavut or Nunavik could.
Located way above the Arctic
Circle, at 71 degrees latitude, the Arctic Wind Park, which opened in 2003,
is the most northerly collection of wind turbines in the world.
And the turbine towers
are certainly impressive.
For those who drive outside
of the community of Havøysund, the giant towers appear suddenly on a
hillside, looking more like lost extraterrestrial invaders from the recent movie
War of the Worlds than like producers of clean, renewable energy.
The enormous towers make
little noise, although when the sun falls slightly on the horizon, they cast
long, eerie shadows, stretching all the way down to Havøysund below.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
Arctic Wind Farm in Arctic Norway produces six times more energy than the small
community of Halvøysund needs - the rest is exported to southern markets.(PHOTOS
BY JANE GEORGE)
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The 80 metre-high towers,
together with the reinforced plastic blades, each weigh 250 tons.
When they're working efficiently,
they produce about 120 gigawatt hours of electricity, five times more than Havøysund,
population 1,000, is able to use.
The rest of this power
is exported to distant consumers via the power grid.
Arctic Wind, a subsidiary
of several power corporations in Norway, owns the $44 million park - and should
recover its entire investment by 2014.
Looking out after the turbines
is a staff of three, who spend most of their days scanning what's going on inside
the towers from a computer screen in an office. Regular maintenance is done
on the turbines twice a year.
Inge Lynghamar of Arctic
Wind says he sometimes has to scale a ladder in the middle of the turbines'
tower to fix a problem or to check on how they are running.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
giant towers cast shadows down over the community of Halvøysund as the
sun moves a bit lower down on the horizon.
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Lynghamar is a fan of his
wind park, which produces power from wind, without sending more warming greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere.
"This is pure energy,"
Lynghamar said.
And one that operates with
few problems. The turbines are made to run for about 20 years without major
repairs.
The main concern of the
wind park's guardians is the level of wind: when there's none, production drops,
but otherwise causes little problem.
However, winds of more
than 70 kilometres an hour can cause the turbines to stop, and it can take some
time to get them back on line.
"The best speed is
41 to 50 km an hour," Lynghamar says. "If you have a good and stable
wind it really works."
Temperatures along this
Arctic coast line only drop to -15 C, but Lynghamar says the turbines could
be fitted with a heating system to withstand the colder temperatures found in
Canada's Arctic.
The Arctic Wind Park's
impact on the environment has been minimal, Lynghamar says. Birds haven't run
into the park's towers, although in other parts of Norway there have been some
bird collisions.
Lynghamar fishermen appreciate
the towers because they can use them to see the direction of the wind is and
how strong it is blowing.
"If it doesn't look
good, they go back to bed."
The Arctic Wind Park has
also become a bit of a tourist attraction. When the park was built, a restaurant-café
was built at the far end of the park to overlook the sea.
Shadows from the towers
fall across Havøysund at some times of the day and during certain times
of the year. Shadow from the turning blades of the turbines have caused some
people in some other communities to complain, but Lynghamar says when this happens,
the turbine blade responsible for the flickering shadow can be set to stop for
a while.
In any event, shadows aren't
much of a problem in a region where there is constant sun in the summer and
darkness for three months of winter.
The Arctic Wind Park is
connected to the main Norwegian power grid, but this isn't the case with other
wind parks in Norway. A wind park on the island of Utsira off the western coast
of Norway uses power from its own turbines.
The electricity produced
from the turbines is used to make hydrogen from seawater. Then, stored hydrogen
is supplied to a generator and a fuel cell to send "clean" power back
to the turbines as needed.
While Canada has been slow
to build wind parks, Europe has embraced wind energy, with more than 10,000
turbines in Germany alone. The European Commission wants 22 per cent of its
energy to come from renewable sources, such as wind, by 2010.
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