Abstract

Curtailment of turbine operations during low wind conditions has become an operational minimization tactic to reduce bat mortality at terrestrial wind energy facilities. Site-specific studies have demonstrated that bat activity is higher during lower wind speeds and that operational curtailment can effectively reduce fatalities. However, the exact nature of the relationship between curtailment cut-in speed and bat fatality reduction remains unclear. To evaluate the efficacy of differing curtailment regimes in reducing bat fatalities, we examined data from turbine curtailment experiments in the United States and Canada in a meta-analysis framework. We used multiple statistical models to explore possible linear and non-linear relationships between turbine cut-in speed and bat fatality. Because the overall sample size for this meta-analysis was small (n = 36 control-treatment studies from 17 wind farms), we conducted a power analysis to assess the number of control-treatment curtailment studies needed to understand the relationship between fatality reduction and change in cut-in speed. We also identified the characteristics of individual curtailment field studies that may influence their power to detect fatality reductions, and in turn, contribute to future meta-analyses. We found strong evidence that implementing turbine curtailment reduces fatality rates of bats at wind farms; the estimated fatality ratio across all studies was 0.37 (p < 0.001), or a 63% decrease in fatalities. However, the nature of the relationship between the magnitude of treatment and reduction in fatalities was more difficult to assess. Models that represented the response ratio as a continuous variable (e.g., with a linear relationship between the change in cut-in speed and fatalities) and a categorical variable (to allow for possible non-linearity in this relationship) both had substantial support when compared using AICc. The linear model represented the best fit, likely due to model simplicity, but the non-linear model was the most likely without accounting for parsimony and suggested fatality rates decreased when the difference in curtailment cut-in speeds was 2m/s or larger. The power analyses showed that the power to detect effects in the meta-analysis was low if fatality reductions were less than 50%, which suggests that smaller increases in cut-in speed (i.e., between different treatment categories) may not be easily detectable with the current dataset. While curtailment is an effective operational mitigation measure overall, additional well-designed curtailment studies are needed to determine precisely whether higher cut-in speeds can further reduce bat fatalities.

Highlights

  • Wind energy development is increasing rapidly worldwide, and hundreds of thousands of bat fatalities are estimated to occur per year due to collisions with terrestrial wind energy facilities in North America [1,2,3]

  • We identified three objectives: 1) evaluate existing control-treatment curtailment study data for bats in a meta-analysis to examine the relative benefit of increased curtailment cut-in speeds; 2) assess the power of the a meta-analysis to quantify fatality reduction using data simulation; and 3) understand how different site or survey characteristics influence the power of individual curtailment studies to detect a difference in bat fatality rates between control and treatment groups

  • Given the scope of bat fatalities at terrestrial wind farms in North America [3, 52], we must learn more about the management effectiveness of curtailment, at higher cut-in speeds

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Wind energy development is increasing rapidly worldwide, and hundreds of thousands of bat fatalities are estimated to occur per year due to collisions with terrestrial wind energy facilities in North America [1,2,3]. Turbine attraction is a leading hypothesis for high observed fatality rates, in migratory tree bats [4, 5]. Curtailment of turbine operations during low wind conditions, in late summer and fall when bat fatality rates are highest, is an operational minimization tactic to reduce bat fatality at terrestrial wind facilities [11]. Because bats tend to be more active at lower wind speeds, increasing turbine cut-in speed can significantly reduce bat fatality [1, 6]. The relationship between the magnitude of increased cut-in speed (e.g., the amount by which the cut-in speed of turbines is adjusted from the factory settings) and the degree of fatality reduction in bats remains unclear

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call