Wind Speed
File:Layer Wind Speed.png
Layer Info
Category Management
Sub-category Environmental conditions

Description

Wind speed, or wind flow velocity, is a fundamental atmospheric quantity.

Wind speed is caused by air moving from high pressure to low pressure, usually due to changes in temperature. Note that wind direction is usually almost parallel to isobars (and not perpendicular as one might expect), due to the rotation of the earth.

Wind speed affects weather forecasting, aircraft and maritime operations, construction projects, growth and metabolism rate of many plant species, and countless other implications.

Wind speed is now commonly measured with an anemometer but can also be classified using the older Beaufort scale which is based on people's observation of specifically defined wind effects.

@wikipedia

MSP Challenge

The wind speed layer is static; users can consult it, for instance, to optimise wind energy production.


Return to environmental conditions.

Types

  • < 5.0 m/s
  • 5.0 - 6.0 m/s
  • 6.0 - 7.0 m/s
  • 7.0 - 8.0 m/s
  • 8.0 - 9.0 m/s
  • > 9.0 m/s

Metadata

Data Source

Marine Copernicus Services

Original Title

Global Ocean Wind L4 Reprocessed Monthly Mean Observations.

Description

The original dataset is a "time series of monthly averaged wind variables calculated over the global oceans. It is estimated from daily global wind fields calculated from retrievals derived from ASCAT scatterometers onboard METOP-A and METOP-B satellites. It consists of six variables including monthly averaged wind speed, zonal and meridional wind components, wind stress amplitude and the associated components. They are calculated as arithmetic means of ASCAT daily wind analyses. The gridded daily wind and wind stress fields have been estimated over global oceans from Metop/ASCAT retrievals using the objective method. The daily analyses use standard products ASCAT L2b during the period April 2007 to present. Wind stress and the related components are estimated over swaths based on the use of Coare3.0 parameterization. The resulting daily fields are estimated as equivalent neutral-stability 10-m winds, and have spatial resolutions of 0.25° in longitude and latitude over global ocean. The objective method provides also errors characterizing the quality of each daily wind parameters at grid cell."

For more information please refer to the datasource description at Copernicus Marine Services

Creation Date

NA. Retrieved on 2017/10.

Methodology

The datalayer was prepared by calculating the 10m height wind speed average for 2016. The data layer was clipped to the North Sea area and reprojected to Lambert's Azimuthal Equal Area (EPSG:3035) projection.

In the Baltic Sea the potential for creating energy from the wind is represented by the wind density, expressed on kW/m2.

Not applicable.

This layer is not available in the Clyde Marine Region Edition.

In the Adriatic Sea there are 3 layers representing the wind speed (wind intensity) at different heights: 25m, 50m, 75m and 100m.

Types

  • < 3 m/s
  • 3 - 4 m/s
  • 4 - 5 m/s
  • 5 - 6 m/s
  • 6 - 7 m/s
  • 7 - 8 m/s

Metadata

Data Source

For Italy's EEZ the data source was ATLANTE EOLICO INTERATTIVO, for the rest of the Adriatic Sea, the data comes from Copernicus Marine Service.

Original Title

NA. Data provided by project partners.

Description

NA. Data provided by project partners.

Creation Date

2021-02-19.

Methodology

The layers were implemented as provided by the project partner.

Not applicable.

This layer is not present in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea.

This page was last edited on 3 April 2023, at 13:11. Content is available under GPLv3 unless otherwise noted.