Hello, I wonder if any of you know anything about wind turbines within woodland, know of good sources for information, or have any experience of related planning applications?
A woodland owner, who for the moment shall be nameless, adjacent to my small woods (bought from woodlands.co.uk with the usual covenant) has submitted a planning application to erect a single turbine, approx 37 m high with 50 m diameter blades. I was astounded, frankly. First, I can't believe a single turbine can be viable, nor can it be big enough to get above the shelter and turbulence caused by trees.
I've found a couple of relevant articles, the first from a quote elsewhere in this forum: http://www.power-technology.com/features/feature127084/ which is a pro-turbine blog, but makes this point:"Directly above the tops of the trees a 15m-40m wide layer will bring no energy yield, as the trees act as obstacles to the wind. "This zone is characterised by considerable turbulence and low wind speeds, and is therefore unsuitable for profitable exploitation of wind energy," wrote Peter Herbert Meier in a report for Renewable Energy World in June 2011.
Above this zone, at around 30m-60m of height, the trees loose their influence on the wind, turbulences decrease and wind speeds rise. Modern state-of-the-art turbines, equipped with hubs more than 100m high, reach into these 'low-turbulence and high-wind' areas, where the winds can reach speeds of 5.8m - 6.7m a second."
Secondly, a research presentation http://www.forestry.gov.uk/pdf/FR_Aviemore_Update_2010_wind_turbines.pdf/$FILE/FR_Aviemore_Update_2010_wind_turbines.pdf, which amongst other things talks about the area that would have to be cleared around turbines.
BTW:
- It's in Scotland, so Scottish Planning laws
- strictly speaking, it's an agent / developer who has made the application, the owner's name doesn't appear on the application, but fully aware of it and supportive.
Thanks for any useful advice, precedents etc
Dave