IELTS Sample Reading 2
IELTS Sample Reading 2
IELTS Sample Reading 2
Wind Power
The power of the wind has been used for centuries to directly drive various
machines to perform such tasks as grinding wheat or pumping water.
Recently, however, the wind has joined other natural forces such as water
and steam as a viable method of generating electricity.
Traditional means of electricity generation using coal or oil-fueled plants
have two major drawbacks; they pollute the environment and the fuels they
use are inefficient and non-renewable. In response to growing environmental
awareness there have been calls for a greener alternative. Nuclear power,
while more efficient and less polluting, is seen by many people as
unacceptable, because of the danger of accidents such as those that happened
at Chernobyl or Three Mile Island. Wind power, however, is clean,
renewable and, with modern advances, surprisingly efficient.
In the 1970s Britain was in the forefront of research into wind power. The
interest in wind diminished in the 1980s due to cheap North Sea oil, a strong
pro-nuclear lobby and pricing structures that made it uneconomical to set up
wind farms. Britain, the windiest country in Europe, had to wait until 1991
for its first wind farm. Located at Delabole in Cornwall, the farm was
originally the idea of locals who opposed the construction of a nuclear
power plant nearby and decided to set up a private company to generate
power for the area using the wind. They had to fight opposition from local
government and other local residents, who thought the turbines would be
noisy and might interfere with television signals, but eventually, after
showing local officials working wind farms in Denmark, they won and now
there are 10 huge white wind turbines on the Delabole hills.
It is in Germany and Denmark that the greatest advances in wind power have
come. Germany alone produces half of the wind generated electricity in
Europe. Every year Germany adds 400 Megawatts (Mw) of capacity. In
2000 alone capacity expanded by 1669 Mw. Denmark now produces 30% of
its electricity from wind power and this is predicted to rise to 50% by 2010.
Both countries have encouraged this growth by fixed feed tariffs which
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