Archive/Wind Characteristics and Energy Evaluation at Nasiriya International Airport, Iraq
Wind Characteristics and Energy Evaluation at Nasiriya International Airport, Iraq
Firas A. Hadi, Sarmad Jasim Hasan, Qutaiba Mazin Abdulmajeed et al.
6. Juli 2026
en

Abstract

In order to reduce aviation’s negative environmental effects and support international efforts to battle climate change, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) seeks to cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. About 2–3% of the world’s CO2 emissions come from aviation, and at high altitudes, the fraction of other GHGs that significantly alter the atmosphere is considerably greater. In this study, hourly wind speed data at 100 m height from ECMWF’s fifth-generation reanalysis (ERA-5) were used over a period of 40 years (1985–2025). Hourly assessments of wind speeds at 40 m and 80 m heights are conducted in ERA-5, with biases at specific ground locations rectified via the Global Wind Atlas (GWA). This research estimates and analyzes many factors, including Weibull statistical parameters, daily and monthly wind speed variations, cumulative distribution function (CDF), and atmospheric turbulence intensity. The energy generation from several wind turbine types at different elevations was assessed. The findings indicate that the examined location revealed fair potential for the construction of large-capacity wind energy units at heights equal to or above 80 m. Turbines that are less than 50 m tall are spread out at least 10 km around the airport runway. While turbines that are less than 150 m tall are spread out at least 15 km away from the airport runway.

IPC Classification

G06H01

Keywords

windcharacteristicsenergyevaluationnasiriyainternationalairportiraqorderreduceaviationnegativeenvironmentaleffectssupporteffortsbattleclimatechangecivilorganizationicaoseeksgreenhouse
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