May 31, 2001-3
Copyright © 2001 Earth Policy Institute
Wind Power: The Missing Link in the Bush
Energy Plan
Lester R. Brown
The eagerly awaited Bush energy plan released
on May 17, 2001, disappointed many people because it largely overlooked
the potential contribution of raising energy efficiency. It also
overlooked the enormous potential of wind power, which is likely
to add more to U.S. generating capacity over the next 20 years than
coal.
In short, the authors of the plan appear to be
out of touch with what is happening in the world energy economy,
fashioning an energy plan more appropriate for the early twentieth
century rather than the early twenty-first century. They emphasized
the role of coal, but world coal use peaked in 1996 and has declined
some 11 percent since then as countries have turned away from this
climate-disrupting fuel. Even China, which rivals the United States
as a coal burning country, has reduced its coal use by 24 percent
since 1996.
Meanwhile, world wind power use has multiplied
nearly fourfold over the last five years, a growth rate matched
only by the computer industry. In the United States, the American
Wind Energy Association projects a staggering 60 percent growth
in wind-generating capacity this year.
Wind power was once confined to California, but
during the last three years, wind farms coming online in Minnesota,
Iowa, Texas, Colorado, Wyoming, Oregon, and Pennsylvania have boosted
U.S. capacity by half from 1,680 megawatts to 2,550 megawatts. The
1,500 or more megawatts to be added this year will be located in
a dozen states. A 300-megawatt wind farm under construction on the
Oregon/Washington border is currently the world's largest.
But this is only the beginning. The Bonneville
Power Administration (BPA) indicated in February that it wanted
to buy 1,000 megawatts of wind-generating capacity and requested
proposals. Much to its surprise, it received enough to build 2,600
megawatts of capacity in five states, with the potential of expanding
these sites to over 4,000 megawatts. BPA, which may accept most
of these proposals, expects to have at least one site online by
the end of this year.
A 3,000-megawatt wind farm in the early planning
stages in South Dakota, near the Iowa border, is 10 times the size
of the Oregon/Washington wind farm. Named Rolling Thunder, this
project, initiated by Dehlsen Associates and drawing on the leadership
of Jim Dehlsen, a wind energy pioneer in California, is designed
to feed power to the midwestern region around Chicago. This proposed
project is not only large by wind power standards, it is one of
the largest energy projects of any kind in the world today.
Advances in wind turbine technology, drawing heavily
from the aerospace industry, have lowered the cost of wind power
from 38 cents per kilowatt hour in the early 1980s to 3 to 6 cents
today depending on the wind site. Wind, now competitive with fossil
fuels, is already cheaper in some locations than oil or gas-fired
power. With major corporations, such as ABB, Shell International,
and Enron plowing resources into this field, further cost cuts are
in prospect.
Wind is a vast, worldwide source of energy. The
U.S. Great Plains are the Saudi Arabia of wind power. Three wind-rich
U.S. states North Dakota, Kansas, and Texas have enough
harnessable wind to meet national electricity needs. China can double
its existing generating capacity from wind alone. Densely populated
Western Europe can supply all of its electricity needs from offshore
wind power.
Today Denmark, the world leader in wind turbine
technology and manufacture, is getting 15 percent of its electricity
from wind power. For Schleswig-Holstein, the northernmost state
of Germany, it is 19 percent and, for some parts of the state, 75
percent. Spains industrial state of Navarra, starting from
scratch six years ago, now gets 24 percent of its electricity from
wind.
As wind generating costs fall and as concern about
climate change escalates, more and more countries are climbing onto
the wind energy bandwagon. In December, France announced it will
develop 5,000 megawatts of wind power by 2010. Also in December,
Argentina announced a plan to develop 3,000 megawatts of wind power
in Patagonia by 2010. In April, the United Kingdom accepted offshore
bids for 1,500 megawatts of wind power. In May, a report from Beijing
indicated that China plans to develop some 2,500 megawatts of wind
power by 2005.
The growth in wind power is consistently outrunning
earlier estimates. The European Wind Energy Association, which in
1996 had set a target of 40,000 megawatts for Europe in 2010, recently
upped it to 60,000 megawatts.
The Bush plan to add 393,000 megawatts of electricity
nationwide by 2020 could be satisfied from wind alone. Money spent
on wind-generated electricity tends to remain in the community,
providing income, jobs, and tax revenue, bolstering local economies.
One large advanced design wind turbine, occupying a quarter acre
of land, can easily yield a farmer or rancher $2,000 in royalties
per year while providing the community with $100,000 of electricity.
U.S. farmers and ranchers, who own most of the wind rights in the
country, are now joining environmentalists to lobby for development
of this abundant alternative to fossil fuel.
Once we get cheap electricity from wind, we can
use it to electrolyze water, producing hydrogen. Hydrogen is the
fuel of choice for the new, highly efficient, fuel cell engine that
every major automobile manufacturer is now working on. DaimlerChrysler
plans to be on the market with fuel cell-powered cars in 2003. Ford,
Toyota, and Honda will probably not be far behind. William Ford,
Chairman of Ford Motor Company, says he expects to preside over
the demise of the internal combustion engine.
Surplus wind power can be stored as hydrogen and
used in fuel cells or gas turbines to generate electricity, leveling
supply when winds are variable. Wind, once seen as a cornerstone
of the new energy economy, may turn out to be its foundation. The
wind meteorologist who analyzes wind regimes and identifies the
best sites for wind farms will play a role in the new energy economy
comparable to that of the petroleum geologist in the old energy
economy.
With the advancing technologies for harnessing
wind and powering motor vehicles with hydrogen, we can now see a
future where farmers and ranchers can supply not only much of the
countrys electricity, but much of the hydrogen to fuel its
fleet of automobiles as well. For the first time, the United States
has the technology and resources to divorce itself from Middle Eastern
oil.
In addition to neglecting the potential of wind,
the Bush energy strategy pays only lip service to climate stabilization.
This is a high-risk strategy. With business as usual, the International
Panel on Climate Change recently projected a global temperature
rise during this century of up to 6 degrees Celsius (10 degrees
Fahrenheit). If this rise occurs, the rest of the world may hold
the United States, the leading CO2 emitter,
responsible.
What the United States needs now is an energy
plan for this century, one that takes into account not only recent
technological advances in wind power, fuel cells, and hydrogen generators,
but also the need to stabilize climate. Perhaps Congress will bring
the energy plan into the twenty-first century and restore U.S. leadership
in the fast-changing world energy economy.
(103k, approx. 25 sec at 33.6 speed)
Copyright
© 2001 Earth Policy Institute
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown, U.S. Farmers Double Cropping
Corn and Wind Energy, Earth Policy
Alert, 07 June 2000.
From Worldwatch Institute
Seth Dunn, Fossil Use Falls Again and
Carbon Emissions Continue Decline, in Vital Signs
2001: The Trends That Are Shaping Our Future (New York: W.W.
Norton & Co., 2001).
Seth Dunn, Micropower: The Next Electrical Era, Worldwatch
Paper 151 (Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 2000).
Chris Flavin, Wind Energy Growth Continues, in Worldwatch
Institute, Vital Signs 2001: The Trends That Are Shaping Our Future
(New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2001).
LINKS
American Corn Growers Association
News Release on using wind power to benefit family farms
http:/www.acga.org/news/
American Wind Energy Associations Year 2000 Global Wind Energy
Market Report
http:/www.awea.org/faq/
global2000.html
European Wind Energy Association
http:/www.ewea.org
International Panel on Climate Change, Third Assessment Report
http:/www.ipcc.ch/pub/
spm22-01.pdf
Worldwatch Institute
http:/www.worldwatch.org
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