Welcome to Wind-Works

An on-line archive of articles and commentary on wind and solar energy, community power, Feed-in Tariffs, and Advanced Renewable Tariffs.


Join the Alliance for Renewable Energy and support a grass roots movement that's bringing feed laws and feed-in tariffs back home to North America.

Sign Up, if you would like to be added to my email distribution list on feed-in tariff developments worldwide.--Paul Gipe


August 23, 2010

What's New on Feed-in Tariffs

What's New on Community Power

What's New on Solar Energy

What's New on Wind Energy


What Can Be Found on This Site

Paul Gipe

This site contains information about my books, an archive of my articles, and descriptions of my workshops on wind energy and Advanced Renewable Tariffs. This site also contains an extensive collection of articles and technical reports on electricity feed laws or renewable energy tariffs. I've been an outspoken proponent of feed laws since the late 1990s when I urged the American Wind Energy Association to call for them nationally. Photograph of Wulf Test Field  & Paul Gipe. Bergey 850 in background.

Photography

My photos are stocked by Still Pictures in London. For more on my photography and for photo tours of several wind farms as well as a sampling of wind energy icons, see the photos section of this site.

Small Turbine Testing

Beginning in 1997 I've measured the performance and noise emissions of small wind turbines at the Wulf Test Field in the Tehachapi Pass. For more information on this work, visit Wulf Test Field.

Previous Web Sites

My web pages have previously been hosted on the Chelsea Green web site and by the Workgroup Wind Turbines at TU-Berlin. My thanks to Michael and Sienna Potts, and to Klaus Kaiser, for their help posting my pages in the past.

Origin of Wind-Works

Since 1981, following a trip to Denmark, I've stressed the theme that wind energy does indeed work, makes economic and environmental sense, and is here to stay. Even then Denmark was a model of how successful wind energy could become--when given the opportunity. In North America at the time, there were few wind turbines and only a few of those operated well. Most simply didn't work. My slogan was as much a statement of what could be as it was a statement of fact. Today, wind turbines are commonplace throughout the world and "wind works", once a bold statement, now elicits a "What? Of course it does. Everyone knows that." And that's the way it should be.--Paul Gipe

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