IT might seem like a flight of fantasy but kites could soon be seen over Manchester generating power.
And the high-altitude kites can provide energy at a cost comparable with that of polluting power stations, researchers claim.
The 'Laddermill' is a chain of controllable wing-like kites attached to a looped cable stretching more than five miles into the sky.
Strong high altitude winds acting on the 'kitewings' produce as upward force on one side of the loop and a downward force on the other, causing it to rotate.
The slowly-turning cable drives a power generator in the Laddermill base station.
Although the concept sounds far fetched, its developers at Delft Technical University in the Netherlands hope to build a working model in the next four years.
They claim one Laddermill could generate 100 megawatts of electricity, compared with only a few megawatts from a conventional wind turbine.
Team leader Professor Wubbo Ockels was inspired by making and flying powerful high-flying kites as a boy.
Power
Winds at 30,000ft are 20 times more powerful than at sea level.
Professor Ockels, an ex-astronaut and head of the European Space Agency's education office, said: 'Above a certain altitude there is a massive amount of wind power. Kites that can tap into that wind can generate a great deal of energy.'
At last month's European Wind Energy Conference in London, the Laddermill team announced plans to test a variety of kiteplane designs next year using inflatable and lightweight materials.
They maintain that despite its size, the structure would be safe.
'If the wind dropped the Laddermill would drift gently to the ground,' said Professor Ockels. 'We want to be safe. Flexible or inflatable kites wouldn't be hazardous; the worst that would happen would be the kite becoming dirty when it landed.
'We would only operate the system with a good forecast and the wings would be adapted to weather patterns.'
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We are organizing local teams to develop the laddermill concept for high and medium altitude wind generation. The teams will design a kite to lift a power cable, 100 to 100 feet; a second kiteplane will be attached to the cable, to see how much farther the two kites can lift the power cable. We hope to have our kiteplane contest organized by earthday 2007. We hope that other communities will organize their own kiteplane contest, and send us an email.