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Pioneer's windmills to hit the streets as councils see the light

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Published Date: 08 March 2009
MINI windmills will be installed on street lights in some areas of Britain in a deal due to be signed with a Scottish wind energy pioneer.
David Gordon, chief executive of Glasgow-based Windsave, is understood to be involved in negotiations with three local authorities in England which would see up to 250,000 lights on mainly rural roads and motorways fitted with turbines.

The deal
would greatly reduce local authority bills, particularly on lights which are on roads that may have a low level of traffic at night.

When the wind is only slight, the lights will automatically kick in to the traditional electrical grid supply.

Negotiations are also under way to seal a similar deal with authorities in the United States.

Gordon has also struck his biggest ever contract, a £19m deal to provide wind power turbines to South Africa.

His firm will provide the mini-turbines for homes being built in new townships on the outskirts of Cape Town.

The South African government is keen to encourage the green energy alternative in outlying areas.

The first shipments will be sent out later next month and will continue over three years. It will create 100 jobs for Livingston Precision Engineering in West Lothian, where the turbines are manufactured. Gordon believes that if the street lighting contract comes off, it would add another 50 jobs.

"Many people think of wind power as farms of giant turbines sprawling across the hillsides or out to sea, but this technology is at a micro level, one home and business at a time."

He said the domestic product had been on the market for some years but there had been a delay in the planning process.

His plans are being financed from internal resources and from key shareholder RAB Capital. Gordon said he was hoping to introduce other institutional shareholders to Windsave to help finance the firm's expansion.

He had once talked of floating the company and said this remained an option depending on market conditions.

The latest orders and interest are a major breakthrough after years of developing the technology, he said.





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  • Last Updated: 07 March 2009 1:47 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Martin from Solarwind,

UK 09/03/2009 10:41:32
I'm horrified to read this news. This company's products have been removed from B&Q, have proved to be useless in comprehensive trials (Warwick Wind Trials),and the Which report concurs that if roof-mounted, they are as much use as a chocolate teapot....to see them being touted to different markets as being viable is dishonest in the extreme.
I am a passionate supporter of wind power - IF correctly sited, it has a large part to play in providing renewable energy in the years to come - unfortunately, simple rules of physics stop roof-mounted turbines from ever being economically viable, particularly in urban areas, where the windspeed over a roof is too low, and far too turbulent (whether in the UK or South Africa)
2

RCro,

Edinburgh 09/03/2009 11:16:10
I'm pro wind, but it needs to happen in wind farms in places where the wind blows. Putting them in cities just ruins their credibility and will be a massive waste of money. Solar chargers on every lamp that sell expensive energy during the day at peak times and buy cheap energy at night would be better.
3

RCro,

edinburgh 09/03/2009 11:18:32
Actually I've realised they plan to site them in rural roads and motorways, so maybe it's not as bad as I thought.
4

streetlight,,

Scotland 09/03/2009 21:37:14
Correction Martin; Solarwind. B&Q removed the product due to the delays customers were having in obtaining planning permission: not due to poor sales. As for the Warwick Wind Trials, I dont believe that the people conducting them have ever done such a trial before. Are the results credible?...A micro wind turbine, when correctly situated will generate good amounts of electricity. For the vast majority of home in the UK, particularly the South and urban areas, they are not viable, but mounted high on street lights in rural areas, particularly in Scotland, N Ireland and N England. they most definitely are! ...Grapes, sour, rearrange!
5

Martin from Solarwind,

UK 10/03/2009 16:02:30
-not a grape in sight, sour or otherwise - I've no intention of rubbishing Encraft's results, at least they've produced some.....
(surprising that, no roof-mounted turbine supplier has EVER produced any verified data that their machines work when roof -mounted), yet continue to try to bamboozle people into buying them. I note no attempt was made to "rubbish" the Which report....(they'd sue!)
A micro turbine, if properly sited, will indeed produce well if properly sited - which on most sites is atop a 100' tower.....unfortunately planning consent for such towers is like hen's teeth!
I remember the time well that carts and horses were being driven through the trade descriptions act, when B&Q were claiming that a roof-mounted chocolate teapot would provide 30% of ones electricity in an urban area.....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVo0WvuX7K0 - is a link to an interview by Newsnight's "Ethical Man" during which the MD of Windsave admits you'd be lucky to get £10-worth of electricity out of one in a YEAR!
I note that also no mention is made of the proposed sales to South Africa, which will undoubtedly be for roof-mounted ones in an urban area...........

 

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