WASHINGTON D.C. --
The latest "Energy Infrastructure Update" report from the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission's Office of Energy Projects states that
renewable energy sources (i.e., biomass, geothermal, solar, water, wind)
accounted for 41.14% of new electrical generating capacity installed in
October 2012 and 46.22% for the first ten months of 2012.
According to the report,
in October, ten new wind power projects (594 MW) came on line as well
as three biomass projects (69 MW), 10 solar projects (59 MW), and one
water power project (5 MW).
During the first ten months of 2012, 92 wind projects
(5,403 MW), 167 solar projects (1,032 MW), 79 biomass projects (409 MW),
seven geothermal projects (123 MW), and 9 water power projects (12 MW)
have come on-line. Collectively, these total 6,979 MW or 46.22% of all
new generating capacity added since the beginning of the year.
By comparison, new natural gas capacity additions since
January 1, 2012 totaled 67 projects (5,702 MW) or 37.8% while three new
coal projects added 2,276 MW (15.1%). Nuclear and oil represented just
0.8% and 0.1% of new capacity additions respectively.
The new renewable energy generating capacity added in 2012
represents a 47.7% increase over the level recorded for the same period
in 2011. Renewable sources now account for 14.93% of total installed
U.S. operating generating capacity — more than nuclear (9.27%) and oil
(4.32%) combined.
Release of the FERC study was followed by the most recent
"Electric Power Monthly" report by the U.S. Energy Information
Administration which finds that non-hydro renewables accounted for 5.2%
of net electrical generation for the first nine months of 2012 - an
increase of 13.3% compared to the same time period in 2011. Almost
two-thirds (63.44%) of the non-hydro renewable electrical generation
came from wind, followed by biomass (26.70%), geothermal (7.78%), and
solar (2.08%). Solar alone increased by 133.3% while wind grew by 17.7%.
Combined with conventional hydropower, renewable energy sources for the
period January 1 - September 30, 2012 accounted for more than 12.2% of
net U.S. electrical generation. According to the EIA,
"These additions understate actual solar capacity gains. Unlike other
energy sources, significant levels of solar capacity exist in smaller,
non-utility-scale applications - e.g., rooftop solar photovoltaics."
Comparing the first nine months of 2012 to the same
time-frame in 2011, coal used for electrical generation dropped by
16.3%, nuclear by 1.1%, petroleum liquids by 20.3%, and petroleum coke
by 35.5%. Conventional hydro also declined by 14.5%. Among the
non-renewable energy sources, only natural gas showed an increase
— 26.1%.
The continued strong growth by renewable energy sources
for electrical power generation over the past four or five years
vindicates the investments made in these technologies. Moreover, their
rapid expansion underscores their near-term viability for ultimately
phasing out both fossil fuels and nuclear power.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/12/renewables-account-for-46-new-us-electrical-generating-capacity-since-january
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