Wind turbines contribute to climate change: study by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Oct 4, 2018 Wind turbines, designed as an alternative to fossil fuels, still contribute to climate change due to the way they redistribute heat and moisture in the atmosphere, according to a study published Thursday. Researchers from Harvard University found that powering the entire United States with wind energy would cause a 0.54 degree Celsius ground temperature rise in the area where the turbines were located, and a 0.24C increase across the continental United States. "Wind beats coal by any environmental measure, but that doesn't mean that its impacts are negligible," said David Keith, an engineering and public policy professor and senior author of the study, published in Joule. By comparison, the average global temperature has risen by approximately one degree since the end of the 19th century. The Paris climate accord, meanwhile, calls upon countries to limit temperature increases to between 1.5C to 2C to avoid serious environmental consequences. Previous studies have also examined the impact of wind turbines on climate change. One recent study, published in the journal Science, concluded that covering an area of the Sahara desert with wind turbines would affect local temperature, rainfall, and in turn, vegetation. The Harvard researchers said that installing solar panels would have an impact around 10 times smaller than wind turbines for the same energy generation rate. "The direct climate impacts of wind power are instant, while the benefits accumulate slowly," Keith said. "If your perspective is the next 10 years, wind power actually has -- in some respects -- more climate impact than coal or gas. If your perspective is the next thousand years, then wind power is enormously cleaner than coal or gas."
Big wind, solar farms could boost rain in Sahara Tampa (AFP) Sept 6, 2018 Installing massive wind and solar farms in the Saharan desert could slow global warming, and also give a small but beneficial boost to rain in the dry African region, researchers said Thursday. The study in the journal Science used computer modeling to simulate the effect of covering 20 percent of the largest desert on the planet in solar panels and installing three million wind turbines there. A solar and wind farm of that size - more than 3.5 million square miles (nine million square kilomete ... read more
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