April 8, 2004-6
Copyright © 2004 Earth Policy Institute
Europe Leading World Into Age of Wind Energy
Lester R. Brown
Europe is leading the world into the
age of wind energy. In its late 2003 projections, the European Wind
Energy Association (EWEA) shows Europe's wind-generating capacity
expanding from 28,400 megawatts in 2003 to 75,000 megawatts in 2010
and 180,000 megawatts in 2020. By 2020, just 16 years from now,
wind-generated electricity is projected to satisfy the residential
needs of 195 million Europeans, half of the region's population.
Wind-generating capacity worldwide, growing
at over 30 percent per year, has jumped from less than 5,000 megawatts
in 1995 to 39,000 megawatts in 2003, an increase of nearly eight
fold. Among fossil fuels, natural gas leads with an annual growth
rate of just over 2 percent during the same period, followed by
oil at less than 2 percent, and coal at less than 1 percent. Nuclear
generating capacity expanded by 2 percent.
The modern wind-generating industry was
born in California during the early 1980s, but the United States,
which now has 6,300 megawatts of generating capacity, has fallen
behind Europe in adopting this promising new technology. Germany
overtook the United States in 1997; within Europe, it leads the
way with 14,600 megawatts of generating capacity. Spain, a rising
wind power in southern Europe, may overtake the United States in
2004. Tiny Denmark, which led Europe into the wind era with the
development of its own wind resources, now gets an impressive 20
percent of its electricity from wind. It is also the world's leading
manufacturer and exporter of wind turbines. (See data).
After developing most of its existing 28,400
megawatts of capacity on land, Europe is now tapping offshore wind
resources as well. A 2004 assessment of Europe's offshore potential
by the Garrad Hassan wind energy consulting group concluded that
if Europe moves more aggressively to develop its vast offshore resources,
wind could be supplying all of the region's residential electricity
by 2020.
The United Kingdom is moving fast to develop
its offshore wind capacity. In April 2001, it accepted bids for
sites designed to produce 1,500 megawatts of wind-generating capacity.
In December 2003, the government took bids for 15 additional offshore
sites with a generating capacity that could exceed 7,000 megawatts.
Requiring an investment of over $12 billion, these wind farms off
the east and northwest coasts of England, the north coast of Wales,
and in the shallow waters of the Thames estuary could satisfy the
residential electricity needs of 10 million of the country's 60
million people.
The push to develop wind in Europe is spurred
in part by concerns about global warming. The record heat wave in
Europe in August 2003 that scorched crops and claimed 35,000 lives
has accelerated the replacement of climate-disrupting coal with
clean energy sources.
Wind is appealing for several reasons. It
is abundant, cheap, inexhaustible, widely distributed, clean, and
climate-benign, a set of attributes that no other energy source
can match. When the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) released its
first wind resource inventory in 1991, it pointed out that three
wind-rich statesNorth
Dakota, Kansas, and Texashad
enough harnessable wind energy to satisfy national electricity needs.
Those who had thought of wind as a marginal source of energy obviously
were surprised by this finding.
In retrospect, we now know that this was
a gross underestimate of the potential of this renewable energy
source, because it was based on the technologies of 1991. Advances
in wind turbine design since then enable turbines to operate at
lower wind speeds, to convert wind into electricity more efficiently,
and to harness a much larger wind regime. In 1991, wind turbines
may have averaged scarcely 40 meters in height. In 2004, new turbines
are 100 meters tall with much longer blades that are designed to
more efficiently capture the energy in wind, perhaps tripling the
amount of harvestable wind. While the DOE could say in 1991 that
North Dakota, Kansas, and Texas had enough harnessable wind energy
to supply national electricity needs, we may now be able to say
that they have enough harnessable wind energy to supply national
energy needs.
When the wind industry first began to develop
in California in the early 1980s, wind-generated electricity cost
38� per kilowatt-hour. Since then it has dropped to 4� or below
in prime wind sites. And some long-term supply contracts have been
signed for 3� per kilowatt-hour. EWEA projects that by 2020 many
wind farms will be generating electricity at 2� per kilowatt-hour,
making it cheaper than all other sources of electricity.
Once we get cheap electricity from wind,
we have the option of electrolyzing water to produce hydrogen, which
provides a way of both storing and efficiently transporting wind
energy. At night when the demand for electricity drops, the hydrogen
generators can be turned on to build up reserves. Hydrogen is the
fuel of choice for the fuel cell engines that automakers worldwide
are working on and, if push comes to shove on the climate front,
cars with gasoline-burning internal combustion engines can be converted
to hydrogen.
Once in storage, hydrogen can be used to
fuel power plants, much as natural gas is used. This hydrogen can
be either a backup for wind power or an alternative to natural gas,
especially if rising prices make gas prohibitively costly for electricity
generation.
The principal cost for wind-generated electricity
is the capital outlay for initial construction. Since wind is a
free fuel, the only ongoing cost is for maintenance. Given the recent
volatility of natural gas prices, the stability of wind power prices
is particularly appealing. With the possibility of even higher costs
of natural gas in the future, natural gas-fired plants may be used
increasingly as a backup for wind-generated electricity.
The United States is lagging in developing
wind energy not because it cannot compete technologically with Europe
in manufacturing wind turbines but because of a lack of leadership
in Washington. The wind production tax credit of 1.5� per kilowatt-hour,
which was adopted in 1992 to establish parity with subsidies to
fossil fuel, has been permitted to lapse three times in the last
five years, most recently at the end of 2003 when Congress failed
to pass a new energy bill. The uncertainty about when it will be
renewed has disrupted planning throughout the wind power industry.
Europe's leadership has given it a major
economic bonus: nine of the world's 10 leading wind turbine manufacturers
are in three countriesDenmark,
Germany, and Spain. These happen to be the three countries that
have had the strongest and most stable market incentives.
The United Stateswith
its advanced technology and wealth of wind resourcesshould
be a leader in this field, but unfortunately it continues to rely
heavily on coal, a nineteenth century energy source, for much of
its electricity at a time when European countries are replacing
coal with wind. Europe is not only leading the world into the wind
age, it is also leading the world into the post-fossil fuel agethe
age of renewable energy and climate stabilization. By demonstrating
the potential for harnessing the energy in wind, Europe is unveiling
the new energy economy for the rest of the world.
Copyright
© 2004 Earth Policy Institute
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown, Plan
B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2003).
Lester R. Brown, Janet Larsen, and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts,
The Earth Policy Reader (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
2002).
Lester R. Brown, Eco-Economy:
Building an Economy for the Earth (New York: W.W. Norton
& Company, 2001).
Lester R. Brown, "Coal: U.S. Promotes While Canada
and Europe Move Beyond," Eco-Economy
Update, 3 December 2003.
Lester R. Brown, "World Wind Generating Capacity
Jumps 31 Percent in 2001," Eco-Economy
Update, 8 January 2002.
Lester R. Brown, "Wind Power: The Missing Link in
the Bush Energy Plan," Eco-Economy
Update, 31 May 2001.
Janet Larsen, "Record Heat Wave Takes 35,000 Lives,"
Eco-Economy Update, 9
October 2003.
From Other Sources
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), Wind
Power Outlook 2004 (Washington, DC: March 2004).
Cristina L. Archer and Mark Z. Jacobson, "Spatial
and Temporal Distributions of U.S. Winds and Wind Power at 80 m
Derived From Measurements," in American Geophysical Union, Journal
of Geophysical Research, vol. 108, no. D9, 13 May 2003.
European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) and Greenpeace,
Wind
Force 12 (Brussels, EWEA: 2003).
EWEA, Wind
Power Targets for Europe: 75,000 MW by 2010 (Belgium: October
2003).
Greenpeace, Sea
Wind Europe (London: March 2004).
Janet L. Sawin, "Wind Power's Rapid Growth Continues,"
in Worldwatch Institute, Vital Signs 2003 (New York: W.W.
Norton & Company, 2003), pp. 38-39.
LINKS
American Wind Energy Association
http:/www.awea.org
Danish Wind Industry Association
http:/www.windpower.dk
European Wind Energy Association
http:/www.ewea.org
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
http:/www.nrel.gov
Windpower Monthly
http:/www.windpower-monthly.com
Worldwatch Institute
http:/www.worldwatch.org
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