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Taming hurricanes with arrays of offshore wind turbines

Abstract

Hurricanes are causing increasing damage to many coastal regions worldwide1,2. Offshore wind turbines can provide substantial clean electricity year-round, but can they also mitigate hurricane damage while avoiding damage to themselves? This study uses an advanced climate–weather computer model that correctly treats the energy extraction of wind turbines3,4 to examine this question. It finds that large turbine arrays (300+ GW installed capacity) may diminish peak near-surface hurricane wind speeds by 25–41 m s1 (56–92 mph) and storm surge by 6–79%. Benefits occur whether turbine arrays are placed immediately upstream of a city or along an expanse of coastline. The reduction in wind speed due to large arrays increases the probability of survival of even present turbine designs. The net cost of turbine arrays (capital plus operation cost less cost reduction from electricity generation and from health, climate, and hurricane damage avoidance) is estimated to be less than today’s fossil fuel electricity generation net cost in these regions and less than the net cost of sea walls used solely to avoid storm surge damage.

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Figure 1: Modelled versus observed tracks and peak surface wind speeds for Hurricanes Katrina, Sandy, and Isaac.
Figure 2: Modelled surface wind speeds with and without turbines three times during Hurricane Katrina.

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Acknowledgements

We thank T. Marchok from NOAA/GFDL for helping compare results with operational model results. Funding sources include NSF, NASA and NASA high-end computing.

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Authors and Affiliations

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Contributions

M.Z.J. developed the idea for the study and the GATOR–GCMOM atmospheric–ocean model and the treatment of wind turbine power extraction within it. He ran the simulations with the code and provided numerical output. C.L.A. coded and performed the storm surge analysis with output from the atmospheric–ocean model, developed figures, and performed the model validation analysis. W.K. performed the analysis of turbine strength and contributed to the economic analysis. All three contributed to writing and editing the article.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Mark Z. Jacobson.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Jacobson, M., Archer, C. & Kempton, W. Taming hurricanes with arrays of offshore wind turbines. Nature Clim Change 4, 195–200 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2120

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