Wind Turbines on Farmland May Benefit Crops

New research shows that wind turbines may help corn and soybean crops stay cooler and dryer, help them fend off fungal infestations and improve their ability to extract growth-enhancing carbon dioxide from the air and soil

December 20, 2010 RSS Feed Print

AMES, Iowa—Wind turbines in Midwestern farm fields may be doing more than churning out electricity. The giant turbine blades that generate renewable energy might also help corn and soybean crops stay cooler and dryer, help them fend off fungal infestations and improve their ability to extract growth-enhancing carbon dioxide [CO2] from the air and soil.

Speaking at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union, a scientific society, in San Francisco today, a researcher at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory and his co-researcher from the University of Colorado announced the preliminary findings of a months-long research program aimed at studying how wind turbines on farmlands interact with surrounding crops.

“We’ve finished the first phase of our research, and we’re confident that wind turbines do produce measureable effects on the microclimate near crops,” said Ames Laboratory associate and agricultural meteorology expert Gene Takle.  According to Takle, who is also a professor of agricultural meteorology and director of the Climate Science Program at Iowa State University, the slow-moving turbine blades that have become a familiar sight along Midwestern highways, channel air downwards, in effect bathing the crops below via the increased airflow they create.

His colleague in the research is Julie Lundquist, assistant professor, Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, at the University of Colorado at Boulder, joint appointee at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and Fellow of the Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute.  Lundquist’s team uses a specialized laser known as a lidar to measure winds and turbulence from near the Earth’s surface to well above the top tip of a turbine blade.

“Our laser instrument could detect a beautiful plume of increased turbulence that persisted even a quarter-mile downwind of a turbine,” Lundquist said.

 Both Takle and Lundquist stressed that their early findings have yet to definitively establish whether or not wind turbines are in fact beneficial to the health and yield potential of soybeans and corn planted nearby. However, their finding that the turbines increase airflow over surrounding crops, suggests this is a realistic possibility.

“The turbulence resulting from wind turbines may speed up natural exchange processes between crop plants and the lower atmosphere,” Takle said.

For instance, crops warm up when the sun shines on them, and some of that heat is given off to the atmosphere. Extra air turbulence likely speeds up this heat exchange, so crops stay slightly cooler during hot days. On cold nights, turbulence stirs the lower atmosphere and keeps nighttime temperatures around the crops warmer.

“In this case, we anticipate turbines’ effects are good in the spring and fall because they would keep the crop a little warmer and help prevent a frost,” said Takle. “Wind turbines could possibly ward off early fall frosts and extend the growing season.”

For instance, crops warm up when the sun shines on them, and some of that heat is given off to the atmosphere. Extra air turbulence likely speeds up this heat exchange, so crops stay slightly cooler during hot days. On cold nights, turbulence stirs the lower atmosphere and keeps nighttime temperatures around the crops warmer.

“In this case, we anticipate turbines’ effects are good in the spring and fall because they would keep the crop a little warmer and help prevent a frost,” said Takle. “Wind turbines could possibly ward off early fall frosts and extend the growing season.”

Other benefits of wind turbines could result from their effects on crop moisture levels. Extra turbulence may help dry the dew that settles on plants beginning in late afternoon, minimizing the amount of time fungi and toxins can grow on plant leaves. Additionally, drier crops at harvest help farmers reduce the cost of artificially drying corn or soybeans.

Tags:
agriculture,
global warming,
technology,
environment,
plants

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There are 79,000,000 single family dwelling occupied in the United States according to the 2009 census. If every home were to install a small scale 2-3kW roof mount wind system and they generated even 1.5kWh on average we would reduce our entire electricity draw from commercially supplied dangerous plants by about 15%. That is a huge number. How many of these plants could be shut down. How many of the employees working in these dangerous mines could leave them and start installing these wind systems. The point is there is good and bad with every system we choose and slamming one against the other only causes both to break. Like a child slamming his toys together. Neither are really stronger than the other we need them all. We need to reduce our dependency on oil, gas, Nat gas. And nuclear is so dangerous that it wouldnt be a horrible thing to eliminate them. The amount of human lives that can be lost in one accident is so great that we should always consider the possibility that there is a better way. I am saying that while wind alone isn't the answer it is also an important part of our electricity generation plan. Finding a balance where the plants that are polluting and using up fossil fuels should be our back up systems when the wind is low, sun is down, and we don't live in a geothermal area like California, or Iceland. The worlds largest source of geothermal energy is in California and if we took a look at what Iceland was doing we might be in better shape in that state. There is enough geothermal energy to produce all of the entire states electrical needs and probably Oregon & Washington as well. and now we don't need any coal, nuclear, gas, wind. Simply put a turbine over a high pressured gyser. the opposite of a water fall but same principal. Lets NOT WASTE ANY MONEY ON MORE NUCLEAR OR ANY OTHER TOXIC ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION METHODS> ITS JUST IGNORANT. We can walk around blindly following the pompous power hungry politician leading us to our own deaths in the quest for ultimate power OR, we can open our minds, our eyes, and use the brains we have think for ourselves and be good stewards of what God gave us.

Jeff Wilkerson of OH 11:00AM April 16, 2011

These Magic Machines also save the planet (actually, the planet has been doing fine for the past billion years or so), the only price we pay is local environmental destruction. Remember, think globally so you can ignore what happens locally.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-1350811/In-China-true-cost-Britains-clean-green-wind-power-experiment-Pollution-disastrous-scale.html#ixzz1CYAoLzqH

The Sorcer's apprentice of IN 9:17PM February 12, 2011

Besides the rusted steel bones of these "magic machines" there will be piles of carbon fiber blades that will last for centuries - archeologists will dig them up and wonder what kind of God we worshiped since we erected so many monuments to him, sacrificing rare earth elements and other valuable materials for there really was no other possible reason such an advanced civilization would return to first century power technology and abandon the advanced power generating systems they had developed.

Imagine the benefit to mankind if the billions of dollars that are being wasted on a non-sustainable technology to extract wind power would be spent on solving the nuclear waste problem, How much further we would be in 2025 than if we cast our resources into the wind because we were all indoctrinated with the idea that the magic wind machines were our salvation.

I supposed the beautiful plume of turbulence also improves the flying skills of the crop duster since he will be challenged to be as effective as he is now.

And the drying effect during a drought would be beneficial to improving the hybrids that could withstand the change. I really can't think of anything negative when I dream while under the spell cast by the "Magic Machines".

The Sorcerer of IN 8:45PM February 12, 2011

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