Bangalore:
India’s National Aerospace Laboratories, or NAL, has developed a wind
turbine that a top scientist said will work with greater efficiency and
generate more power in the country’s low-speed wind and dusty
conditions.
The enhanced efficiency “is proven in
simulations, and we want to prove it in the field,” said J.J. Isaac,
head of the propulsion and wind energy division at NAL, the aerospace
arm of India’s largest state-funded research agency, the Council of
Scientific and Industrial Research, or CSIR.
Clean
energy: A Suzlon Energy wind turbine in Maharashtra. The average wind
speeds in India are around 5.6-7.5m per second. (Photo: Santosh
Verma/Bloomberg)
NAL will test these turbines—developed in
collaboration with Chennai-based Structural Engineering Research Centre
and industrial partner Sangeeth Group—at a wind farm in Coimbatore,
Tamil Nadu, in August. The tests would be done for a month during the
peak wind season in the region that is close to the Western Ghats.
NAL
said new turbines are at least 10% more efficient for average Indian
wind speeds that are nearly one-third lower than average wind velocity
in Europe. Average wind speeds in India are around 5.6-7.5m per second,
according to the Centre for Wind Energy Technology, an Indian
government unit that is helping NAL on the project. Wind velocity in
Europe is around 11.9m per second.
Lower speeds affect wind
power output, unless a turbine is tuned to efficiently generate
electricity at these speeds. NAL says a 500KW or smaller turbine is
ideal for local conditions and has commissioned a study to look for
potential wind farm zones to generate power from such machines.
NAL,
which is building the windmill in Coimbatore under CSIR’s new millenium
Indian technology leadership initiative, said the two blades for its
windmill are designed to ensure dust does not stick on them and thus,
reduce maintainence.
“Dust erodes (turbine) efficiency. You need to design the blades to
suit the conditions,” said A.R. Upadhya, director of NAL.
India’s
installed capacity for wind power generation is 8,757.2MW, only a fifth
of the potential 45,000MW, according to the Indian Wind Energy
Association, or IWEA.
Analysts say that there is no ideal
size of wind mills for Indian conditions and manufacturers take a call
depending on the local terrain to install the best turbine.
“Suitability
is determined on techno-commercial and logistic considerations,” said
Manish K. Singh, secretary of IWEA, a not-for-profit body that promotes
wind power in India.
Over 10 manufacturers that include
Suzlon Energy Ltd, GE Wind Energy India Ltd, and Vestas Wind Technology
India Pvt. Ltd, a unit of Denmark’s Vestas Group, make wind turbines in
India for both local and overseas markets.
“For conditions in
India, there are enough designs in turbines that are efficient to
generate power,” said V.D. Kalani, honorary secretary of the Indian
Wind Turbine Manufacturers Association.