Earth

NASA study: Texas wind farms cause local warming

You know how you can use a ceiling fan to pull warm air down from the top of a room in winter? A NASA study released on April 29, 2012, found that wind farms in Texas might be doing something similar. They appear to be acting as fans to pull warmer air closer to Earth’s surface at night. As a result, according to a study of satellite data on wind farms in Texas – whose results were released yesterday (April 29, 2012) – an area of west-central Texas covered by four large wind farms warmed at a rate of .72 degrees Celsius per decade in contrast to nearby parts of Texas without wind farms.

This study – whose lead author is Liming Zhou at the University of Albany, State University of New York – looked at land surface temperatures from the years 2003 to 2011.

The results were published in the April 29, 2012 issue of Nature Climate Change. Zhou and colleagues studied land surface temperature data using instruments on NASA’s Aqua and Terra satellites.

NASA says the U.S. wind industry has installed a total of 46,919 megawatts of capacity through the end of 2011 – representing more than 20 percent of the world’s installed wind power and about 2.9 percent of all U.S. electric power – and has added more than 35 percent of all new U.S. generating capacity in the past four years, according to the American Wind Energy Association and the Department of Energy. This added capacity during that timeframe is second only to natural gas, and more than nuclear and coal combined.

Texas has four of the world’s largest wind farms.

Read more about this study from NASA

Bottom line: A study by Liming Zhou at the University of Albany, State University of New York and colleagues – using data from NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites – shows that wind farms in Texas caused local warming. An area of west-central Texas covered by four large wind farms warmed at a rate of .72 degrees Celsius per decade in contrast to to nearby parts of Texas without wind farms.

Posted 
April 30, 2012
 in 
Earth

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Deborah Byrd

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