QUOTE Skeptic22 in post #1,
"Is there a limit to the amount of energy which can be extracted from the wind?
There are a huge number of windfarms springing up around the world.. all taking energy from the wind.
The assumption seems to be that this is limitless and 'free'.
Clearly this is not possible".
Actually, the last statement is only partly true. The derived power is not "limitless", but it is "free". OmCheeto is correct in assessing that the atmospheric wind is solar powered, and that is what limits it, the total small percentage of solar power that falls upon earth. On the other hand, the derived power is "free" in the sense that if we do not use it, it is wasted elsewhere in friction losses with various earthern structure. Since all the wind is eventually lost to entrophy, and therefore converted to heat anyway, the net earthern energy change to windmills from trees etc (net change in what climate would have been with no manmade obstacles) is zero. The total earthern solar power undergoes entropy change back to heat, is re-radiated away into empty space in all cases and it is equal no matter which "windkiller" it comes from.
So A.T. and jbriggs444 are absolutely correct in their assessments. The idea that the wind energy is "free" is not only possible, but clearly mandatory.
Omcheeto always seems to offer interesting proposals to catch us off guard. He suggested that we could hang a balloon with a tab of tape protruding from it and passing wind would produce a global torque. This is sort of true if we set the experiment up and blow on the hanging balloon with a nearby fan. In actuality, I think the balloon will soon bob in the breeze and the tab will scoot around to the backside, perhaps oscillating from one side to the other because the moment the tab rotates all the way around to the other side, it will be blown backwards. Which brings up an another interesting scenario.
Suppose we attach the fan to the experimental balloon too. This may even be possible with the new tiny personal battery powered fans now available. In this case the little fan will always blow directly on the tab if we strategically place it. Unfortunately only part of the airflow will strike the tab and the rest will miss. I suggest that the balloon will rotate backwards since the fan will now basically operate as a fanjet motor with a minor contrary obstacle (the tab) in it's wake. The same would happen if we were to set up a sailboat and try to blow ourselves forward by catching the breeze from a forward-facing fan set up behind the sail on deck. The boat would likely sail backwards.
Suppose we did set the boat up and it did sail backwards? If we let it continue and it struck a reef, wouldn't this reef began to apply a continuous torque to mother Earth besides wrecking the rudder? Unfortunately the fan would create a small "waste" breeze behind us (ahead of the bow), and this would circle the Earth and create a headwind (against the stern). Except the waste exhaust would actually first dissipate against Earth from all the trees. But the trees would create a nulling counter-torque in doing so. The only thing that would create a complete rotational torque on Earth would be a chemically fueled rocket engine. I once naively proposed this to my young grandson as a method to slowly rotate the moon so we did not have to look at the same old side all the time. This is before I found out about tidal locking. Whoops.
One other thing to think about is that all the winds on Earth are due to rotating flows. Whenever the wind blows one way somewhere on earth, it is blowing the other way somewhere else. (Else the wind would pile up on one end.

) The rotational flows are caused by the sun and related to Earth's natural rotation. The sun heats water and air which rises in pockets of both narrow and broad columns. When the air rises (warm air
and vapor rise), other air must rush into fill the pressure void. This wind is also encouraged to rotate just as does a bathtub drain. We may say all atmospheric air movement is of this nature.
Which brings us to the reason windpower is desireable. A bit ago I said that not just air, but also water rises. Very few people realize that water is lighter than air (as vapor). So extra newly heated rising water is largely responsible for our current, more aggressive weather changes. The ocean water is being heated to an extra degree (literally) by extra greenhouse gases trapping heat near the ground. The warmer water therefore evaporates easier and rises more quickly, dragging more atmospheric air with it. Caught in the throes of global warming, we now have more overall earthern wind than we had before. The solar power delivered to Earth is pretty much the same to be sure. But less re-radiation of entrophical heat is escaping to outer space. Unfortunately the usual escape route is slightly more blocked mostly by the "thicker" blanket of greenhouse gases formed by fossil-fuel carbon dioxide and the boot-strap effect of more water vapor at any given time. We need windpower to off-set this.
It is true most wind generators won't amortize. That is because they are too small, basically toys. Modern commercial units do pay for themselves.
Wes
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