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Windtech International September October 2025 issue
 

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The Front Cover

In wind resource assessment, the conventional approach to meteorological (met) mast siting has emphasised distance, recommending maintaining a maximum separation distance between each met site and the proposed wind turbine locations. This industry-accepted method assumes that shorter distances translate to better representativeness. But is distance truly the metric that matters most? The article on page 6 challenges this long-held belief.


Publisher's Note

Daily legislative hurdles for renewable energy in the USA

Features

Does Distance Really Matter in Met Campaigns?
By Liz Walls and Erin Roekle, One Power Company, USA
 
By Manu Centeno-Telleria, Researcher and Lecturer, Mondragon University, Spain

 

By Richard Chen, Customer Success Manager, Miros, Norway

By Per Ängskog, Kourosh Tatar and José Chilo, University of Gävle, Sweden

 

Windtech Future

Wind Turbines on Buildings

By Ahmad Hemami, McGill University, Montreal, Canada

View from Inside

By Endri Lico, Principal Analyst, Global Wind Supply Chain and Technology, Wood Mackenzie, Denmark

Latest News

 

Windtech International September October 2025 

Supported by:

detectnew
 
Borealis Wind
 
mondragonunibertsitatea
 
mcgilluniversity
 
miros
 
opc
 
renewableuk
 
resoft
 
universityofgavle
 
windspeed
 
woodmackenzie
 
WWEC 2025
 
zxlidars
 
     
 
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