New Hampshire --
In an effort to support U.S. President Obama’s “all of the above”
energy strategy, today the DOE released a report focused on the wind
industry and how it could provide up to 35 percent of the nations energy
by 2050.
The purpose of the report, according to Tom Kiernan, CEO of
the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), is to "articulate the
vision for the wind industry -- a very compelling vision of getting to
20 percent by 2030 and 35 percent by 2050 -- and articulating the
significant benefits that come to the country from implementing that
vision."
The report, Wind Vision: A New Era for Wind Power in the United States,
shows how with technological advancements driving projected cost
reductions, in combination with continued siting and transmission
development, wind power can be economically deployed to provide
renewable power in all 50 states. "A key point is the declining cost,"
said Kiernan, adding "while they vary throughout the country, costs have
come down by 58 percent over the past five years and are projected to
continue coming down."
Technology is also improving, he said. "The turbines are getting
taller, the technology better, we are producing more wind electricity at
lower costs." Kiernan also pointed out that the industry is ahead of predictations that were set forth in the 2008 Wind Vision report.
"We’re ahead of schedule on those cost reductions," said Kiernan. "We
have gotten more cost out of the industry than we expected and we have
deployed more wind than we had expected in that 2008 report."
Methodology
The Wind Vision report looked at three scenarios for wind
development, a baseline with wind power capacity held constant at 61 GW,
a business-as-usual scenario and the study scenario. According to the
report:
The Study Scenario starts with
current manufacturing capacity (estimated at 8-10 GW of nacelle assembly
and other large turbine components within the U.S. today) and applies
central projections for variables such as wind power costs, fossil fuel
costs, and energy demand in order to arrive at a credible projected
pathway that would maintain the existing industry, for purposes of
calculating potential social and economic benefits. The Study Scenario
is a plausible outcome, representing what could come about through a
variety of pathways, including aggressive wind cost reductions, high
fossil fuel costs, federal or state policy support, high demand growth,
or different combinations of these factors. The resulting Study
Scenario—10% by 2020, 20% by 2030, and 35% by 2050 wind energy as a
share of national end-use electricity demand—is compared against the
Baseline Scenario to estimate costs, benefits, and other impacts
associated with potential future wind deployment.
"That analysis was just used to calculate the benefits," explained
Kiernan. "What is relevant is the projection for meeting the scenario
does lead to the significant cost savings for consumer, the increased
jobs and then all of the environmental benefits that are calculated in
the report as well."
Wind Energy Could Be a Powerhouse
The study scenario concludes that aggressive wind deployment would
have an overall positive economic benefit on the U.S, providing nearly
$280 billion in consumer cost savings by 2050. That savings comes from
not using natural gas for electricity, explained Peter Kelley, AWEA's
Vice President of Public Affairs. "As you provide another source of
electricity and don’t have to burn as much gas for electricity, more of
it is available for home heating and other uses so it tends to avoid
price spikes/shocks that consumers face when natural gas goes very
expensive, he explained. Kelley pointed out that wind energy saved consumers $1 billion in just two days during the "polar vortex" this year.
The report states that the U.S. could install up to 11 GW per year in
new wind energy capacity through 2050, an ambitious but feasible
deployment scenario comparable to the wind capacity installed in 2012,
according to a White House Fact Sheet about the report. This growth
could lead to America operating and maintaining a fleet of more than 400
GW nationwide through 2050. The report also indicates that the United
States could install a total of 86 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2050,
creating clean energy jobs in coastal communities.
It projects that the wind industry could employ more than 600,000
people by 2050 in industries such as construction, engineering,
transportation, manufacturing, operations, maintenance, and supporting
services. Today there are approximately 50,000 wind industry workers.
Wind Vision also defines a roadmap
of actions the wind energy industry and the research community can take
to optimize wind’s potential contribution to the nation’s energy
portfolio. The nine core “action areas” in the report’s roadmap range from
technology advancement to workforce development, and are designed to
remove hurdles to wind power deployment, while boosting U.S.
manufacturing competitiveness and the clean energy workforce.
Kiernan is hopeful that the message in the report will hit home on
capital hill. He said that the benefits of wind are clear and
encouraging. "I think the report helps make a strong case that should be
of interest across the political spectrum," he said.
One of the most important messages of the report said Kiernan is that
the entire vision is achievable. "What’s needed is stable policy but
this is very doable as demonstrated by the fact that we are ahead of
schedule [as set forth in the 2008 report]. "We can do this," he said.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2015/03/us-government-provides-framework-for-35-percent-energy-from-wind-by-2050
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