|
Going with the wind: Little goes long way
Small-scale turbine maker in Barrio Logan
By Onell
Soto
SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Wind power isn't just about towering
turbines in the desert producing electricity
for thousands of homes at a time.
It can be done on a much smaller scale, and
a start-up San Diego company is hoping to
prove it can be profitable.
Helix Wind, based in Barrio Logan,
has developed an innovative turbine design,
which spins on a vertical, rather than
horizontal axis, that it says will help
produce power in remote areas far from the
electric grid — and in big cities like
Chicago.
And it is buying up a couple of other small
turbine makers, which it says will enable it
to offer a variety of products depending on
what its customers need.
The company hopes to capitalize by expanding
“small wind” development into new areas such
as urban cell towers, homes, cruise ships
and billboards. The small wind industry
focuses on turbines that produce enough
power for a few light bulbs or a few houses,
not neighborhoods.
“Twenty, thirty years ago, they were farm
equipment,” said Ron Stimmel, who tracks the
industry for the American Wind Energy
Association, a trade group. But in recent
years, they've gotten more popular as a
source of renewable energy because they are
less expensive than comparably sized solar
arrays. The appeal is visceral, Stimmel
said.
“It's a very tangible thing to do,” he said.
“Every time it spins around, you get green
electrons.”
Sales of the units grew 78 percent last year
to more than 10,000 nationwide, Stimmel
said, but he doesn't know what effect the
recession, tight credit or federal
incentives such as a 30 percent tax credit
have had this year.
“I suspect growth, but I don't know how
much,” he said.
The industry is made up of several hundred
companies, Stimmel said.
Helix's goal is to re-engineer small wind
and sell it as a commodity, said President
Scott Weinbrandt, a former Gateway and Dell
executive who went on to start a company
that made electronic signatures on legal
documents possible.
Helix is pushing, for instance, to sell
turbines to companies that need a steady
supply of power in remote areas, places such
as ski resorts, cell-phone towers, oil
derricks and cruise ships.
“Those applications today are being supplied
by diesel generators,” Weinbrandt said.
The wind turbines won't replace the
generators — the wind doesn't blow that
steady and strong — but they mean diesel use
may be radically reduced.
Even in places with a connection to the
electric grid, a wind turbine might make
sense.
Helix last week signed a deal for a
demonstration project with Core
Communications, a Orange County cell-phone
tower developer, for two tower-mounted
turbines in Riverside and Los Angeles
counties.
One of the things they hope to find out is
whether the turbines will make more power
than the towers need, making it possible to
sell it back onto the grid.
They also want to find out how difficult it
will be to get permits for the towers, and
what kind of reaction to expect from
neighbors in an urban environment, Core
Chairman Keith Pinter said.
A new wave of towers is required for the
coming fourth-generation, or 4G, wireless
networks, and companies are looking for a
way to put them in while lightening the
impact on the environment, Pinter said.
“We love what Helix has been able to do with
a small wind turbine,” Pinter said.
The company also is looking to sell its
turbines to residents and commercial
buildings — and it is pushing them as a
complement to solar panels. In many places,
it's windier at night than during the day.
Helix, which was started in 2006 and traded
over the counter since February, is not yet
profitable.
It has produced about 150 of its signature
turbines in a Thailand factory and sold them
around the world.
Those turbines spin on a vertical axis and
have the look of a soft-serve ice cream
cone. While less efficient than models that
look like airplane propellers, they are able
to produce power in lighter, gustier and
more erratic winds, said Mike Slattery, the
company's chief design engineer.
Stimmel, with the wind association, said he
has heard those claims from producers of
vertical-axis wind turbines, but he is not
sure they are true.
And, he said, it's important for buyers to
make sure a small turbine makes sense in a
particular location, recommending at least a
year's worth of wind monitoring.
“I've seen a lot of poorly placed
installations that produce 1 percent or less
of what their output is expected to be,”
Stimmel said.
Finding out how Helix's turbines compare
with others is the goal of testing being
done at the company's test facility, the
yard of a house on a ridge near Boulevard,
70 miles east of downtown San Diego.
The wind wasn't blowing much on a recent
afternoon as Slattery worked on the
turbines.
A light breeze started one of the turbines
spinning, it shook slightly as the blades
pushed against the force of magnets in its
generator, but it didn't get up to operating
speed.
Efficiency is just one consideration,
Slattery said.
“For people to have it in an open
environment, it has to be quiet, and it has
to look good,” he said.
Some 2,000 miles away, architect Kathleen
O'Donnell is getting used to the turbine she
had installed atop her riverfront home on
Chicago's North Side.
“I can feel some vibrations,” O'Donnell
said. “It shakes a little bit. Once it gets
rolling, you can't really detect it, you
have to go outside and look.”
The wind production fits in with other steps
O'Donnell is taking to make the house
energy-efficient, such as using a geothermal
system for heating and cooling.
She's not sure how it will work out.
“I don't know how the winter's going to go,”
O'Donnell said. “We'll see. It's a bold
experiment.”
And because her goals were on energy
independence and aesthetics, she's not
looking too closely at how long it will take
for lower utility bills to make up for the
cost of the $7,500 turbine, plus its
installation.
“It has other value to me,” O'Donnell said.
“It's pretty.”
|