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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday June 09 2020, @03:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the got-wood? dept.

Sweden welcomes its first wooden wind turbine tower:

The wheels have begun to turn on an interesting new form of wind turbine in Sweden, with the country's first wooden power-generation tower now complete. Built from sustainably sourced materials and said to offer comparable performance to traditional wind turbines, it's hoped the wooden power tower will be a harbinger of cheaper and greener solutions for renewable energy in the Nordic country, with commercial versions planned for a couple of years down the track.

Following in the footsteps of a similar creation in Germany, the new wooden wind tower is the brainchild of Swedish engineering firm Modvion, which is out to improve on what it sees as significant drawbacks when it comes to typical wind towers. These tall, steel towers demand thick bases to support their upper sections, which not only makes them very expensive to produce, but very expensive to transport to site, with rules around load size on public roads often proving problematic.

Modvion is instead working on a modular version that can be made out of cheaper and greener materials than steel, which requires huge amounts of energy to produce. The company's wooden wind towers are designed to reach heights of more than 120 m (393 ft), at significantly lower cost than those made out of steel, with the modular approach allowing for stackable sections to be transported on public roads without issue. They are also claimed to be carbon neutral from the day construction begins.

The 30-meter (100-ft) proof-of-concept tower was built together with wood construction company Moelven at its facility in Töreboda. The wooden sections of the turbine were then transported to Björkö, an island outside Gothenburg around 200 km (124 mi) away, with the final piece put into place in late April.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 09 2020, @07:42PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 09 2020, @07:42PM (#1005339)

    I never really appreciated my American wooden house until I lived in earthquake country. I wouldn't want to live in something that might become a rock pile. OTOH, I've heard that wood-reinforced masonry is the best of both worlds. You get a durable, insulated surface on the outside and a flexible frame that can keep all that durable stuff from tumbling in on you when the Big One comes in the middle of the night. It's crazy expensive though. Wood framing is the way to go when there's a possibility that everybody wants to move from your town because the next boom is someplace else. Italy has ghost towns too [yourguidetoitaly.com], so I don't let smug Europeans or Americans who think Europe is better get me down.