MCP-Validierung (Englisch)
The validation is based on Høvsøre 40m data. Here is 14 years of measurements, so the long-term wind speed is known. There is taken one year at a time as local data and EMDConWx meso data as reference. Here the years 2015 (high wind), 2016 (low wind) and 2017 (normal wind) is used to see if the long-term expectations are as the long term measured based on these different local years.
More MCP sessions can show more combinations for comparisons
The session overview page with the examples.
Below a table with the different LT predicted mean wind speeds. Two variants of the 2015 and 2017 based predictions are shown (by cloning the one and changing the selected model).
Below results of the experiments shown in table:
LT truth: 7,93 | |||||
Input | Method | Predicted LT m/s | Deviation | Dev.% | Unc. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Regression | 7,96 | 0,03 | 0,4% | 6,3% |
2016 | Regression | 7,85 | -0,08 | -1,0% | 3,5% |
2017 | Regression | 7,87 | -0,06 | -0,8% | N/A |
2017 | Simple scaling | 7,93 | 0 | 0,0% | 4,3% |
2015 | Scale local | 7,93 | 0 | 0,0% | 6,3% |
Testing MCP with Høvsøre data
As seen the largest deviation to the true long-term wind speed (14 y) is 0.08 m/s (1,0%). The AEP uncertainty will depend on the Turbine technology and wind speed level. For this wind regime, the AEP uncertainty will round a factor 2 on wind speed uncertainty The largest error is therefore well inside the estimated uncertainty. It can thereby be concluded that the tool seems to do a good job and that the EMDConWx data as reference work almost perfect at this site.
For the 2017 Regression, there are below 1 y of data, therefore the uncertainty is not presented. Expanding 2017 slightly with some data from 2016, gives the uncertainty shown by “Simple scaling” method.