Meteorological assessment of vertical axis wind turbine energy generation potentials across two Swiss cities in complex terrain
Aldo Brandi (Laboratory of Urban, Environmental Systems, Ecole, Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland), Gabriele Manoli (Laboratory, of Urban, Environmental Systems, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne,, Switzerland)

TL;DR
This study evaluates the potential of vertical axis wind turbines in two Swiss cities with complex terrain, using high-resolution meteorological simulations to quantify their energy generation capacity across different timescales.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed city-scale assessment of VAWT energy potential in complex urban environments, considering local meteorological and geographical factors.
Findings
Lausanne has 24% higher wind speeds than Geneva.
Maximum micro-generation potential occurs in summer for both cities.
An individual VAWT can produce about 2665 kWh annually, comparable to 16.5 m² of PV panels.
Abstract
Wind energy is the most mature renewable energy technology, however, its exploitation in cities is often met with skepticism. Thanks to their ability to operate effectively at low wind from any direction, vertical axis wind turbines (VAWTs) offer an attractive opportunity for wind energy harvesting in cities, but limited evidence exists on their potential in complex urban environments, and the role of different geographical settings, local meteorological conditions, and urban characteristics remains unclear. Here we use realistic Weather Research and Forecast model high-resolution wind speed simulations alongside representative VAWT power curves to quantify the range of micro-generation potentials at the annual, seasonal, and diurnal scale across two Swiss cities (Lausanne and Geneva) residing in complex terrain. Our results show that Lausanne generally experiences higher (+24%) wind…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWind Energy Research and Development
