At 107 meters (350 feet) above the ground, everything is quiet except the rush of the wind. Jessica Kilroy spends so much time at this height that her face is often red from windburn. She has been going outdoor rock climbing since she was 4. But today, Kilroy isn’t scaling a cliff. She’s at the top of a wind turbine! Wind turbines harness energy from the wind and convert it into electricity. As the wind turns the blades, a rotor spins a shaft inside the turbine. A generator converts this motion into electricity (see How Wind Farms Work).
Wind power is a type of renewable energy. That means it will never be used up. Most countries produce electricity by burning fossil fuels, such
as coal, oil, or natural gas. These fuels come from the ground and will eventually run out. Wind turbines also don’t produce air pollution, while burning fossil fuels does.
If a turbine’s blades get damaged, they can’t catch the wind as well. When this happens, it’s Kilroy’s job to fix them. As a rope access technician, she uses rock-climbing gear to get to the blades. Then she uses construction tools to repair the damage. Kilroy recently spoke to SuperScience about her work.