A viral Facebook post being shared in Australia claims wind farm generators only last a few years, requiring frequent costly and environmentally unfriendly replacement, but AAP FactCheck has found this claim to be false.
Experts told AAP FactCheck the average lifespan of wind turbine generators was approximately 20 years.
The post below from May 2022 shows an image of a crane and a wind tower, with text stating: “The wind farm in Mt. Pulaski has been running for 3 1/2 years. They have been replacing the generators in all the wind towers. … So evidently the life span on these generators on these things is about 3 to 4 years.”
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Listing equipment allegedly used to replace the generators, the post says: “That is a huge amount of diesel fuel being used to maintain these wind towers.”
The same claim, which apparently originated earlier this year, has been shared repeatedly including by several Australian Facebook users (see here, here and here).
However, experts told AAP FactCheck turbines typically last decades, while the wind farm’s management has said the photo is not of generators being replaced.
“Most modern wind turbines are designed to last for 20 years,” Professor David Wood, an expert in mechanical engineering and renewable energy at the University of Calgary, said in an email.
“The claim that turbines have a lifetime of 3-4 years is incorrect.”
Mark Diesendorf, a sustainable energy expert at UNSW Sydney, agrees.
“Generators should last at least 20 years. Apart from size, they are no different from generators in fossil fuelled power stations which generally last for at least 20 years,” Dr Diesendorf told AAP FactCheck via email.
Wind turbines generate electricity by using wind to turn propeller blades around to spin a generator. They release minimal emissions and are considerably more environmentally friendly than energy production using coal and natural gas.
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The HillTopper wind farm near Mt.Pulaski, in the US state of Illinois, is run by Enel Green Power and features 74 units of 2.5-116 turbines.
HillTopper’s management helped debunk the same claim for USA Today in August 2022. They confirmed the farm had not replaced any generators, but 17 gearboxes—used to increase rotational speed—had been swapped out “due to unforeseen and rare defects”.
Read the full article here.