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Wind power is the conversion of wind energy into useful form, such as electricity, using wind turbines.
In windmills, wind energy is directly used to crush
grain or to pump water. At the end of 2007, worldwide
capacity of wind-powered generators was 94.1 gigawatts.[1]
Although wind currently produces just over 1% of
world-wide electricity use, it accounts for
approximately 19% of electricity production in Denmark,
9% in Spain and Portugal, and 6% in Germany and the
Republic of Ireland (2007 data). Globally, wind power
generation increased more than fivefold between 2000 and
2007.[1]
Wind power is produced in large scale wind farms
connected to electrical grids, as well as in individual
turbines for providing electricity to isolated
locations.
Wind energy is plentiful, renewable, widely distributed,
clean, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions when it
displaces fossil-fuel-derived electricity. The
intermittency of wind seldom creates insurmountable
problems when using wind power to supply a low
proportion of total demand, but it presents extra costs
when wind is to be used for a large fraction of demand.
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