Concentration of CO2 in the Atmosphere

Wind Power Does Not Cause Global Warming

And two Harvard researchers did not suggest it does.

Image: Flickr (nate2b)

George Harvey

Two Harvard researchers published an article on wind power that drew rapid reactions from the press. A widespread interpretation of the articles by media was that they had shown that wind turbines somehow cause climate change. That is not what the articles say. It is not what they imply.

“Climate Impacts of Wind Power,” by Dr. David Keith and Dr. Lee Miller, is a scientific paper, and it was not written for casual reading. It is easy to get wrong impressions from it, and unfortunately, there are writers for popular publications who do that. Some of them, I suspect, may do that knowing that they are misrepresenting the facts.

The authors of the paper explicitly contrast reversible changes in local climate that wind turbines can cause by mixing up the lowest region of the atmosphere with the cumulative and persistent effect of burning fossil fuels. In fact, this contrast is the first of the caveats they mention at the conclusion of their article, which says, “Fundamentally different mechanisms cause warmer temperatures from climate change compared with wind power.”

I am not suggesting that the authors should be let off the hook just because their writing has been misinterpreted. Their science has been criticized, and I think for good reason. For one thing, their model looked at a set of conditions that are not even remotely like anything that is likely to happen. In it, they consider the local climatic effect on the continental United States if the country got 100% of its electricity from wind turbines packed into the Midwest. I have not seen any author take the position that we get all of our energy from wind power.

They surely had their reasons to do the model as they did. They must have wanted to make a case that was as clearly stated and comprehensible as possible. Getting 40% or so of our electricity from wind power, along with a similar amount of solar, a large amount of hydropower, and other renewable sources would not have been merely hard to model. It would have been very difficult to comprehend the results. But I think they could have been clearer about their reasons for choosing the model they did.

They conclude that the surface of the United States would be 0.24° C warmer, on average, if we operated according to the model they used for their study. I believe, however, that this is not sufficiently contrasted with whatever the alternatives are. What would the effect be if we continue with the current generating mix? Certainly that would be more than 0.24° C. What would it be if we used the proportions suggested by Dr. Mark Z. Jacobson? The results would be very different. And what would be the result of distributing the wind power throughout the country? The authors actually did say that would be different, but they do not quantify how.

One of the caveats in the paper is, “Our comparison metric ignores many possible benefits and drawbacks of the climate impacts caused by wind power deployment.” The items listed do not include the benefits to human health of reduction in fossil fuel pollutants in the atmosphere. Nor does it include economic benefits arising from reducing the effects of pollution on agriculture. Nor does it include the reduction in costs for electricity, with power purchase agreements from wind power currently averaging only two cents per kilowatt-hour, the least expensive source of power we have.

I believe this paper was not intended to move us to abandon wind power as we move to renewable energy, a purpose for which some people are certainly trying to use it. It is intended to alert scientists to the fact that we have good reasons to give careful consideration to the energy mix that we use in the future. It does not exclude wind power from that mix.

There is one thing that some news reports seem to have missed. It is the first sentence of the conclusion section. It reads, “Wind beats fossil fuels under any reasonable measure of long-term environmental impacts per unit of energy generated.”

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