Abstract
Recent environmental regulations have increased the need for construction of meteorological towers at power generation facilities. Due to practical and economic considerations, tower heights are usually lower than effluent release heights. At heights where wind speed data are not available, the wind speed is usually estimated from the measured wind speed using the %th wind profile power law and assuming neutral stability conditions. This study examines published data for many locations and shows that the %th wind profile power law is often unrepresentative of actual conditions because the degree of variation of wind speed with height depends greatly on atmospheric stability. The frequency of neutral stability conditions also varies appreciably by site. These two considerations are especially important in dispersion models which extrapolate wind speed at stack height from low level wind speed data.