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Adapting technology to low-wind speed regimes

During the last few decades, countries have shifted their focus to new and renewable energy sources to meet their soaring demands while capping greenhouse gases emissions. After hydropower, wind is their safest bet.

August 27, 2015 / 17:30 IST
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  During the last few decades, countries have shifted their focus to new and renewable energy sources to meet their soaring demands while capping greenhouse gases emissions. After hydropower, wind is their safest bet.

The world today perceives wind power as an environment-friendly technology with the potential of solving problems of both energy and environment. Although the use of windmills by humans dates back to centuries, modern and technologically advanced turbines have altered the energy landscape.

Many low-wind speed regimes, including India, have been adapting latest technologies to tap wind power to plug the demand-supply gap.

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India wind regime

Wind density in India is relatively low. Catching the wind requires building special turbines and deploying them in wind-rich sites, which are often located in difficult terrains. Winds here are influenced by strong south-west summer monsoon (April-September) and weaker north-east winter monsoon. The states with high potential are Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Rajasthan.