Windfarms generate microclimates with uncertain effects on peatland carbon store

The microclimates created by the action of wind farms is unlikely to affect the ability of peatland to capture carbon, scientists consider. Previous studies by other researchers have established that wind farms do create localised microclimates, with slightly different temperatures and levels of humidity caused by the action of the turbine blades. The new study, published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters, is the first to measure the effect on peatland, where the majority of Scottish wind farms are located. Researchers from the University of Glasgow, the National Centre for Atmospheric Science, Lancaster University, Leeds University and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology placed a grid of 100 temperature and humidity sensors around wind turbines at ScottishPower Renewables' Black Law Wind Farm in North Lanarkshire. For six months, they took readings from the air every five minutes and from the surface and soil every 30 minutes, including during a period when the turbines were switched off for maintenance. They found that, when the turbines were operational at night, they raised the air temperature around the turbine by nearly 0.2°C and fractionally increased the absolute humidity. The turbines also increased the variability in air, surface and soil temperature throughout each 24-hour cycle.
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