A Geospatial Approach to Siting Wind Right in the Southeast
Abstract
While installed wind turbine capacity continues to increase in the United States,
a noticeable void exists in the Southeast due to a combination of poor wind resources,
competing energy sources, and political opposition. As manufacturers develop turbines
with a higher hub height to harness faster and smoother wind resources, many, including
The Nature Conservancy, anticipate significant wind development in the Southeast.
The identification of low environmental impact areas will not only lower the risk
of project development but will also enable the identification of priority areas for
transmission and distribution infrastructure. To capitalize on the opportunity to
site wind right from the beginning, this study uses a GIS-based exclusion category
approach to identify areas where installed wind power capacity is least likely to
disrupt wildlife and sensitive habitats. The geospatial model creates maps where environmental
and technical areas that are unsuitable for wind farms are removed. The model considers
a sequence of five categories of land exclusion criteria. The resulting geospatial
product suggests that even after removing sizable areas from consideration, there
is significant land for wind development to meet the energy and climate needs of the
Southeast region.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22663Citation
Feng, Xueying; & Li, Shawn (2021). A Geospatial Approach to Siting Wind Right in the Southeast. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22663.Collections
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