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Powering China with Wind Alone

September 10, 2009

 

McElroy’s article is the cover story in the September 11 issue of Science

Keywords

China

Environmental scientists have concluded that China could meet its electricity needs through 2030 with wind power alone. In their study, the cover story in the September 11 issue of Science, lead author Michael McElroy, Butler professor of environmental studies, and colleagues from Tsinghua University, working as part of Harvard’s China Project, conclude that a network of wind turbines operating at just 20 percent of their rated capacity could produce as much as seven times China’s current consumption. China is currently second only to the United States in its national power-generating capacity, and is the world’s fastest growing market for wind power. McElroy wrote a feature article for Harvard Magazine on the electrification of the United States’s transportation infrastructure and the viability of  wind power. His Harvard colleagues have also worked extensively on the problem of  air pollution in China.

  1. September 11, 2009

    You have to give credit where credit is due. Wind power does seem to offer some help in creating energy. It is certainly clean and available. I guess the question is how practical is this industry? It is helping in China and it is helping here in the United States. But it does not appear to be a total solution. Is it practical to put these windmills everywhere? No, not really. So, we seem to have the need for several sources of energy. Fossil fuels look to be the most dependable at this time in history. All these other sources help but none can dominate the world need.

    ~Samuel

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