San Francisco turns to wind power to hit carbon neutrality by 2030

micro-wind-turbineSoon, wind turbines could grace San Franciscan landmarks from Treasure Island to Ocean Beach — or at least they should, according to a new report released today by the City’s urban wind power task force, a group commissioned by mayor Gavin Newsom and state assemblyman Tom Ammiano to envision the renewable future.

Anyone who has visited San Francisco (or attended a 49ers game at blustery Candlestick Park) knows that the City is ideally situated to generate power from wind. Pair this fact with its promise to be a carbon-neutral city by 2030, and it looks like installing turbines will be the best bet. The question now is whether reaching that goal is at all feasible — and the answer depends largely on wind power’s ability to reach cost levels competitive with the coal-generated electricity already distributed by Pacific Gas and Electric.

For the most part, wind turbines have been installed in vast empty areas of land — the desert, the countryside, the rolling unpopulated hills of central California. But that’s starting to change. Turbines may become regular urban fixtures in the next several years. Boston has already built a flock of them near its Logan Airport, and even New York’s mayor Michael Bloomberg has mentioned the possibility of fixing them on top of skyscrapers. It only makes sense for San Francisco — one of the most ambitious cities when it comes to renewable energy adoption — to lead the charge.

The task force issuing today’s report — a 44-member body including City business leaders, environmentalists and representatives from the wind power industry — says the next step will be to chart out the part of San Francisco with ideal conditions for turbines. City government should also consider policy changes to encourage wind companies to set down roots there, creating hundreds if not thousands of green jobs, the group recommends. These measures could include laxer permitting, tax and building codes and a revision of zoning regulations that include height and land use restrictions.

Mayor Newsom, who has taken a strong stance on green business and alternative energy development as he ramps up his campaign for California governor, says he will be adopting and moving fast on many of the proposals contained in the report. In addition to pursuing legislative action, he will also support the construction of more small pilot wind projects around the City. Whether or not this will actually happen given the weak state of the economy and the capital intensive nature of wind turbine construction is another matter.

Here’s a video of the first urban turbine installed in the U.S., located in the Mission District of San Francisco:

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About the Author, Camille Ricketts

Camille is the lead writer for GreenBeat. She came to VentureBeat from Google where she worked on its traditional platforms team, particularly in TV. Before that, she was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal in New York and London. Follow her on Twitter at @camillericketts, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • bruceworthy
    If you cannot find work just change your career by getting the medical transcription degree from your local school at http://bit.ly/5V4v8
  • It is good that the developed world has started taking in steps to address the energy crisis issues the world is facing today. Hopefully, every nation will catch up and try harnessing the renewable sources of energy instead of exploiting the oil, coal and natural gas reserves.... We want diamonds too...
  • Peter A
    Oh, please!!! Let's have a reality check shall we? Wind doesn't scale down linearly like solar. Even under ideal conditions, a small residential turbine will produce no more than a couple of hundred watts. That's less than what a flat panel TV draws from the grid.

    I'm not saying it's not possible to have small scale wind in the energy mix, but this is mostly nonsense PR.

    San Francisco is better off retrofitting those crummy 200-year-old buildings with non-existent insulation and single pane windows that are nice to look at but suck from every other perspective.
  • WendyPower
    Peter,
    Obviously you dont know much about small wind power. One of the turbines that was demonstrated at the press conference yesterday is a 3kw residential size turbine and will produce approximately 4,800kwh annually in San Francisco wind. That is enough to power 75 - 100% most San Francisco houses.

    There are a tremendous amount of small wind turbines available that have the ability to power an entire house in San Francisco.
  • Peter A
    I was about to start responding to this, then I saw your post below. LOL
  • Eldon
    Peter, Solar is much less scalable in San Francisco due to how low-yield most of the city is. Also don't forget that it takes a huge amount of energy to build a solar panel that degrades much quicker than any wind turbine does. Wind power generates day and night. Nevermind that 400w of Solar costs 2-3x of what 400w of wind turbine does...
  • andrew415
    Not to defend PG&E, but the author is wrong in her mention of "the coal-generated electricity already distributed by Pacific Gas and Electric."

    PG&E's power comes primarily from Hydro and Natural gas. We are lucky to have almost no coal powered electricity here.

    Urban wind will be little more than a novelty - SF won't accept large scale turbines anywhere in the city and even the small ones cause annoying sounds and visual issues in residential areas while producing marginal amounts of power.

    I am a 100% advocate for clean power, but we must invest in EFFECTIVE technology, and in the urban landscape that is solar.
  • WendyPower
    The video above is of my house being built with the wind turbine. The turbine produces about 400kwh per month in the not so windy Mission. That is equivelent to around $180 savings on my PGE bill each month. The turbine is extremely quiet and people love the way it looks. People come from all over to check it out and ask me questions about it.
    My company Whirligig Wind Power installed it and if you would like to learn more about what wind power can do for you, call us at 415-525-3800 or email us at sales@trustinthewind.com
  • dirknannes
    The debate is quite interesting, complete with arguments, and provide good information.

    http://ezinearticles.com/?Max-Acai-Boost-Review...
  • I really think that solar power is the way to go! Renewable energy sources ftw! Right now you can even power your laptops from solar power and i am so getting one for me and installing it, at least a small array...
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