Small wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) are frequently located, by necessity, in remote and isolated sites, which increases the difficulty of its energy supply. Some of them are located near the seaside, in environmental sensible zones, and due to tourism activity of these sites, seasonal effects related with population size fluctuation can occur, which can originate certain inefficiencies concerning WWTP design and energy supply. The objective of this paper is to describe a step by step procedure for evaluation of the wind potential of sites that are dependent of in-situ energy generation, as well as, a case study on the utilization of the potential wind energy in Magoito WWTP (5000 p.e.). The employed methodology comprised the collection of one year of in-situ wind data and its validation by comparison with historical data of about 10 years of a nearby anemometric station. The data provided by the two anemometric stations was statistically treated. It allowed the analysis of the results from the two stations are promissory in terms of wind availability and velocity. Finally, it comprised the simulation of the local wind conditions for a considerable larger area in order to find the best site for locating a wind turbine.
Small wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) are frequently located, by necessity, in remote and isolated sites, which increases the difficulty of its energy supply. Some of them are located near the seaside, in environmental sensible zones, and due to tourism activity of these sites, seasonal effects related with population size fluctuation can occur, which can originate certain inefficiencies concerning WWTP design and energy supply [
The studied WWTP is located in Magoito, Sintra, district of Lisbon, Western Portugal, near the seaside, as shown in
In the field, the anemometric station is situated in a small valley, bordered by hills at North and South. The respective geographic coordinates are UTM (ED50 and 29S) 461411.64 and 4301908.35 at 20 meters above sea level. The terrain roughness is considerable small, the main vegetation is low and only by North some small dispersed trees exist, without the occurrence of any significant nearby obstacle which could be sheltering the anemometric station, as shown in Figures 2 and 3.
The data collected by the equipment was obtained from June 2006 to June 2007. The obtained measurement were the daily average wind speed and the direction sensor output according to sixteen directions (N, NEW, NE, ENE, etc.) [
The global results of the statistic data calculations are shown in Figures 4 and 5.
Normally, the presentation data of wind speed classes is made by a Weibull distribution, which is a function representing the wind speed histograms in a compact
form. The two-parameter Weibull distribution function is expressed mathematically as:
Equation (1)
where f(u) is the frequency of occurrence of wind speed (u), (A) is a scale parameter which is related to the mean value of the wind speed and (k) is a shape parameter which determines the shape of the Weibull curve (the higher (k) values more narrow is the curve).
As previously mentioned, the anemometric station is located in a valley and the data is considerably influenced by this fact, as shown in
This station should not be used as reference because of the above mentioned reasons. Nevertheless, the results from this analysis are quite promising since the values of wind speed obtained by the anemometer, at such small height above the ground, reveals that this site could be suitable for wind power production.
There is another anemometric station nearby Magoito WWTP, about 5 km in East direction, currently working for more than 10 years that will be used as the reference station for this study. The available data is composed by 10 minutes average of wind speed and wind direction at 10 meters height above the ground. It is situated in a very small hill, the vegetation around have reduced high, with disperse small trees and farm houses nearby. In addition, there are no significant obstacles, and the terrain does not has a complex topography. The data of the reference station is shown, after statistic calculations, in Figures 6 and 7 was used to extrapolate the wind speed for the map previous presented.
The wind rose indicates that the main directions of the wind are from Northwest which is typical of Portugal West coast, as can be seen in
are ranging 2.1 to 8.8 m/s with an average value of 4.7 m/s.
The wind speed map for Magoito beach was obtained using the commercial simulation software Wasp for a 10 meters space grid in each direction and at a height of 50 meters above the ground, as shown in
For a wind turbine site, which could be a source of
electric energy to supply not only Magoito WWTP (0.15 GWh per year) but also to nearby infrastructures, the small hill in South direction, located close to the WWTP with the UTM (ED 50 29S) coordinates 461374.01 and 4301619.38, is a very strong possibility. A wind turbine with a rated power output of 330 kW and has 50 meters tower and 33.4 meters of rotor diameter, is appropriate for the studied case. This site, where the wind turbine is located in the map, has an average wind speed of 7.2 m/s. Having this configuration the wind turbine output is, a gross production of electrical energy of 1.069 GWh per year, which is equivalent to 3240 hours of production per year, accordingly to Wasp software simulation.
The obtained results are very encouraging as to explore the wind power energy locally. However, it should be noted that the obtained results are mainly guideline values and could have some uncertainty because of the errors associated with the extrapolation concerning the reference station data extrapolation. As previously described, the anemometric station is located at 5 km distance of the wind turbine site and the height is not the same, 10 meters for station anemometer above the ground and wind turbine rotor is at 50 meters above the ground. Nevertheless, there is no doubt that the region is quite good for wind energy applications.
For a similar project to be implemented, it is recommended to install a 50 meters height above the ground anemometric station (preferably at the same height of the wind turbine rotor) in the same location of the future wind turbine, at least for 6 months. This data is essential to validate the preceding results for development of the project also for financial base analyses.