Bancroft Posted Monday at 13:36 Posted Monday at 13:36 I noticed this wind turbine the other day (outlined against the solar panels) on the edge of a new development. Surprised for two reasons: First, will it actually achieve anything meaningful? It's quite low and surrounded by houses and some high trees to the south west (where prevailing winds come from). How/why has the local planning department agreed to it? It doesn't seem to fit the criteria required for personal wind turbines, even permitted development rights.
JohnMo Posted Monday at 13:46 Posted Monday at 13:46 9 minutes ago, Bancroft said: First, will it actually achieve anything meaningful No, not high enough to mitigate wind disturbance 10 minutes ago, Bancroft said: How/why has the local planning department agreed to it? It doesn't seem to fit the criteria required for personal wind turbines, even permitted development rights. Would they have applied?
saveasteading Posted Monday at 15:46 Posted Monday at 15:46 It appears to be on a pole along with a small solar panel. It likely powers a street light which illuminates the adjacent footpath. 1
SteamyTea Posted Monday at 17:23 Posted Monday at 17:23 1 hour ago, saveasteading said: likely powers a street light which illuminates the adjacent footpath I would sell them to the council. Could save them £1000s on each sale. Probably where the myths that renewables are expensive, and don't work, comes from.
saveasteading Posted Monday at 19:48 Posted Monday at 19:48 @SteamyTea I'm not grasping your meaning. I noticed in Spain that all new street lights appear to be solar. At first it seemed to be on commercial estate but now on dual carriageways. The weather helps of course. Must be much cheaper to install than mains, with no trench or cable.
SteamyTea Posted Monday at 19:57 Posted Monday at 19:57 4 minutes ago, saveasteading said: I'm not grasping your meaning. Local Authorities have no idea what things should cost, so selling them a £300 wind turbine made for a boat, a fifty quid PV panel, a small battery system for say £500 and a person to put it all together, should probably be about £1000. Councils will probably pay 5 to 6 times that amount. Then, where there is a meeting to fit renewables to council buildings, someone in accounts, will drag out the £5000/kW number and say 'it is too expensive'. 1
saveasteading Posted yesterday at 08:19 Posted yesterday at 08:19 12 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Local Authorities have no idea what things should cost, It will have been an external consultant, or the developer's designer but the same will apply.
Conor Posted yesterday at 08:52 Posted yesterday at 08:52 It's likely powering a device that doesn't have a mains connection - e.g. logger/telemetry system on a utility, LED sign etc etc. Often these units are cheaper than getting a connection to the mains. Also, if there are road opening embargoes, like you would in a new development, there might not be the option to make a connection. 1
sgt_woulds Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago It's a street lamp. You can see the lamp above the solar panel (maybe it is self powering at night 🙂) 1
saveasteading Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 1 hour ago, sgt_woulds said: maybe it is self powering at night Great idea, the lamp charges the solar panel.
SteamyTea Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, saveasteading said: Great idea, the lamp charges the solar panel. Only if the light emits between 24.25 GHz to 71.0 GHz.
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