Overview of Bergey Windpower Co.
Transcription
Overview of Bergey Windpower Co.
Small Wind Technical Requirements in the U.S. Mike Bergey Bergey Windpower Co. DW’s 2030 Domestic Market Potential Market Segment 2013 Size, Units Data Source Businesses Rural Residential Farm Public Buildings Schools 8,900,000 30,600,000 2,200,000 1,200,000 140,000 Census, 2008 HUD, 2009 USDA, 2007 DWEA Estimate NCES, 2010 2030 Size, Percent 2030 Potential Average Potential Units Suitable Installed Units Size (kW) (MW) 14,300,000 49,100,000 2,200,000 1,350,000 165,000 15% 50% 60% 25% 40% 2,145,000 350 24,550,000 10 1,320,000 150 337,500 250 66,000 250 Total Potential (MW): Distributed Wind: ~ 1,300 GW Offshore Wind: ~ 1,100 GW (<30m depth); ~ 600 GW (30-60m depth); ~ 2,500 GW (>60m depth); Total = ~ 4,200 GW Onshore Large Wind: ~ 8,000 GW Current (2013) U.S. Generating Capacity: ~ 1,100 GW (EIA) 750,750 245,500 198,000 84,375 16,500 1,295,125 Manufacturing: ISO-9001 ISO-14001 Small Wind Standards Landscape Turbine: AWEA 9.1-2009 UL 6142 Wiring: NEC NEC 694 Interconnection: Varies by utility Inverter or Controller: UL 1741 IEEE 1547 Tower: IBC / EIA-222-F Endless Supply of “Snake Oil” Products Clueless inventors and unethical opportunists bring dozens of new small wind turbines to market annually General public wants to believe that there’s been a performance and cost breakthrough; but lack the experience or tools to sort wheat from chaff For numerous articles and citations, see subcategories at http://www.windworks.org/cms/index.php?id=17 U.S. Green Building Council LEED, with no wind turbine standards yet (DWEA is working with them on this), is another challenge AWEA 9.1-2009 Turbine Performance and Safety Standard* Certification required by most states offering incentives Expect federal requirement in 2014 or 2015 Covers turbines up to 200m2 in rotor area Testing can be by manufacturer, but certification must be by accredited agency Small Wind Certification Council (www.smallwindcertification.org) Intertek (www.Intertek.com/wind/small/) Germanischer Lloyd Industrial Services GmbH *Available at http://www.smallwindcertification.org/wpcontent/uploads/2011/05/AWEA_2009-Small_Turbine_Standard1.pdf AWEA 9.1-2009 Based on IEC 61400 standards for performance, acoustics, and safety – but some differences Nearly identical to British and Japanese certification standards Required reports: Performance (based on IEC 61400-12.1) Acoustics (based on IEC 61400-11) Safety and Function (based on IEC 61400-2) Duration (6 months, hours > V, 90% availability) Structural Analysis (based on IEC 61400-2) AWEA 9.1-2009 Requires consumer-oriented performance reporting: Rated Annual Energy at 5 m/s average Rated Sound Level per fixed definition (~ 10 m/s, distance of 60m) Rated Power at 11 m/s Certification cost: $30,000 - $100,000 Limited reciprocity between certification agencies / countries (SWCC, Intertek, BRE, TUV-NEL, ClassNK, etc.) UL 6142 Small Turbine Electrical “Small” means a person can’t climb into the nacelle Concerns electrical safety, mostly references other UL electrical standards Example: UL 1004, Generators Will be required by 2014 National Electric Code Not all local inspectors use the latest version of NEC Certification by Underwriters Laboratory (UL) or Intertek Cost: $10,000 - $20,000 UL 1741 Inverter Standard Created ~ 20 years ago for PV inverters, but also applied to small wind inverters Requires safety features and specific settings Requires minimum power quality (e.g., THD<5%) Certification costs $25,000 - $80,000 Similar to inverter standards in other countries Most OEM inverters carry UL 1741 certification Non-inverter controls subject to UL 1547 National Electric Code (NEC) Mostly concerns wiring and requirements of listed (certified) electrical – pertains to installation Local electrical inspections NEC Article 694 covers small wind systems Mostly harmless, but generator grounding can be an issue 2014 version will require turbine and all associated electrical equipment to be listed (certified) Towers Need to offer range of height options, 24m – 49m Need to be able to design custom foundations due to wide variation in soil conditions Local building permit will require structural analyses to the code they follow, typically the International Building Code (IBC) References TIA/EIA-222-F Each county assigned a “Wind Class”; mostly 85 – 130 mph (38 – 58 m/s) Analyses must be “stamped” by a Professional Engineer licensed in the customers state (fee of $500 - $2,500) Interconnection Federal law guarantees right to connect Utilities will require an “accessible disconnect switch” Some utilities have a “pre-approved inverter list”, but most just require certification to UL 1741 or IEEE 1547 Simple applications and quick approval are the norm, but there are exceptions 41 states offer “net metering”, though rules and coverages vary over a wide range. Questions?