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Welcome to the Renewable Energy Research Laboratory (RERL)

The electricity we use every day produces air pollution and greenhouse gases with serious consequences on our environment and health, globally and locally. Generating electricity through wind power and other renewable energy technologies can greatly reduce that damage.

Wind power installations across the US are currently generating about 10 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) annually, enough to power one million average American homes. In particular, Massachusetts is already benefiting from wind power and customer demand for clean energy is growing. Across the Commonwealth, people are asking how they can make use of wind energy themselves.

The Renewable Energy Research Laboratory (RERL) at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst exists to promote education and research in renewable energy technologies. RERL focuses chiefly on wind energy in New England, including: offshore wind power issues, resource assessment, renewable energy software development, hybrid power systems, wind turbine dynamics and control, and wind farm siting and performance.

RERL is funded primarily by the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust, Massachusetts Division of Energy Resources, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).

What's New at RERL:

 
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