Winds of change for windmills
In every region of the world, people have devised a host of ways
to draw groundwater from its source, among them such traditional devices as
buckets attached to ropes or levers, the Archimedean screw, and the shaduf. But
whatever the means, until the early nineteenth century, they all had to rely on
only four available sources of power - human or animal muscle, the force of
running water itself, and the wind.
Attempts to harness the wind have a history that goes back at
least 5 000 years to when the Egyptians first used sails to propel boats on the
Nile. Fixed windmills are known to have existed in parts of the Middle East by
200 B.C.; by A.D. 1000, they were common around the Mediterranean, and by the
twelfth century had reached northern Europe, where they became an important
source of energy, primarily for milling grain or, as in the Netherlands, for
draining flooded lowlands.
In fact, by the eighteenth century, windmills represented one of
the most advanced forms of technology. However, with the invention of the steam
engine early in the nineteenth century and later of the internal combustion
engine, the value of wind-driven machines for pumping water or other purposes
diminished, and windmills seemed relegated to being archaic monuments of a
picturesque past. It is therefore something of an irony that the potential of
windpumps, after several centuries of neglect, has recently been "rediscovered"
and that efforts are being made to develop and promote their use, particularly
for remote areas in the developing world. According to the authors of the
Windpumping Handbook, there are now between three-quarters of a million and one
and a half million windpumps operating around the world, and they are being
manufactured and sold in at least 28 countries, 14 of them developing nations.
The UNDP Centre on Small Energy Sources, in its February 1987
Newsletter, cites the renewal of interest in windpumps in a number of Third
World countries. In Sri Lanka and Morocco, for example, programmes have been
launched to replace tens of thousands of diesel/kerosene pumps with windpumps.
Why this recent interest in an ancient technology? One obvious
answer is the realization that the world's supply of fossil fuels is limited,
non-renewable, and fast being depleted - the energy crisis that is fueling the
incentive to develop all possible sources of alternative energy: nuclear, solar,
geothermal, biogas, and wind. But there are other reasons as well. Fossil fuels,
which now run most water pumps, must be imported by the majority of developing
countries - a significant, often crippling drain on their meagre foreign
exchange resources. Internal combustion engines, whether they use petrol,
diesel, or kerosene, require frequent and relatively skilled maintenance for
which many rural users may be inadequately prepared. Even with proper care,
these high-speed engines have a fairly short operating life; repairs require
trained technicians and parts are often expensive, in short supply, or simply
unavailable. And unless a country is geared to their manufacture, both engines
and parts must be purchased abroad with precious foreign exchange.
The windpump, such as the one designed by the Intermediate
Technology Development Group, a British charity dedicated to increasing the
income-generating capabilities of poor people in rural areas of the developing
world, avoids all these problems. It runs on a free energy source. It requires
little maintenance and has a life of 20 years or more. It is simple enough in
design and materials to be manufactured by small scale industry and thus can be
made locally, saving on cost and foreign exchange, as well as providing local
employment.
Unfortunately, for all the wind pump's advantages, it has at
least one major limitation. It will work only where there is adequate wind -
meaning wind with the proper speed, frequency, and timing. Modern wind pumps
need a minimum wind speed of about 2.5 metres per second (6 mph or 5 knots) and
are designed to furl in winds above 10-12 m/s. The wind must also blow
frequently enough to permit the pump to draw sufficient water to meet the needs
of humans, animals, or crops, and it must blow during the seasons when rainwater
is scarce or absent. Fortunately, these conditions are met in perhaps half the
world's land mass.
However, the presence of adequate wind is not in itself a
guarantee that windpumps will be feasible. The pumps can be installed only where
there is minimal turbulence caused by hills, valleys, trees, and buildings, and,
of course, where the water table is near enough to the surface - 200 metres or
less. Air density also affects the windpump's efficiency. It is estimated that a
well-designed windmill can harness 25-40 per cent of the wind's kinetic energy,
but this energy is reduced by factors which lower air density, especially
altitude. For example, at 1000 metres, wind at a given speed loses some 11 per
cent of its sea-level kinetic energy, although this loss is frequently
compensated for by higher wind speeds.
The modern windpump consists of five basic components: wind
sails, a tail, a transmission mechanism, a tower, and the pump, together with
some type of storage system. A variety of designs have been developed for each
of these elements. The most common sail is the multibladed, horizontal axis
type. The tail, which projects from the rear of the rotating blades, serves to
keep the sail facing into the wind and, in high winds (usually above 10-12 m/s),
furls the sails by turning them parallel to the windstream, thus reducing the
danger of damage. The transmission converts the rotary motion of the sail's axis
into a form suitable for driving the pump. The tower, normally between 10 and 20
metres high, serves two purposes: it raises the sail above ground turbulence and
up where wind speeds are higher because not slowed by ground friction. The type
of pump will depend on the "pump head", the distance the water must be lifted.
For surface or shallow water, a suction pump is normally used, while for deep
wells, some form of centrifugal or positive displacement pump is more
appropriate. Because the centrifugal type requires high rotation speeds and will
work only within a narrow rotation speed range, the positive displacement pump
is usually preferred.
While much has changed over the centuries, many things have
remained the same. One of these is man's need for fresh water, a need as
imperative today as it was thousands of years ago. Another is man's continual
search for ways to ease the burden of physical labour by harnessing the forces
of nature. Millions of fertile acres in the developing world still yield
marginal crops because they are not adequately irrigated; millions of people,
most of them women, spend grueling hours a day just hauling water for domestic
use. The ancient technology of windmills, updated, is beginnning once again to
play a significant role in providing rural folk with the necessary power to
obtain this life-giving liquid.
Farhana
Haque