American Wind Energy Association
awea.org wind energy works for america
Member Center News About AWEA\ Events Legislative Policy Small Wind Publications Resources Utility
28 Jan 2010   07:49:37 pm
AWEA CEO Bode reacts to Obama's speech
AWEA CEO Denise Bode today issued the following statement on President Obama's State of the Union address:
Quote :


The wind energy industry applauds the President's emphasis on job creation. Under the President's leadership, the Recovery Act saved 40,000 wind jobs. The industry now looks forward to working with the President to put in place the policies—including a national Renewable Electricity Standard—that will create thousands more jobs, including in manufacturing. A Renewable Electricity Standard (RES) with strong, aggressive near-term targets is the best way to provide the certainty needed for businesses to expand domestic wind manufacturing.


Category : AWEA News | Posted By : Chris Madison
28 Jan 2010   04:03:02 am
State of the Union: renewable energy equals jobs
President Obama did not mention wind energy tonight--he did mention clean coal and nuclear. In some ways he did not need to mention wind, especially since in recent days members of his Administration have been citing the latest wind energy growth statistics as a successful outcome of the Recovery Act.

What was more striking than the omission of the word wind was the fact that each time he talked about jobs--the highest priority for his administration going forward--he immediately mentioned clean energy jobs. The two ideas became a single vision. The President reiterated his commitment to building a new energy economy and showed that he understands the role wind energy and solar and other renewables are playing in the creation of new jobs. That sends a strong signal to the American people.

The President also touched on the increasing global competition in the construction of clean energy manufacturing facilities, saying in reference to China, India and Germany, "These countries are making serious investment in clean energy because they want those jobs."

He also renewed his call for "a comprehensive energy and climate bill with incentives that will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy in America. ..Providing incentives for energy efficiency and clean energy are the right thing to do for our future – because the nation that leads the clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy. And America must be that nation."

How do we get the manufacturing jobs here? How do we get the investment? A renewable electricity standard (RES), which is part of the comprehensive energy and climate bill mentioned by the President.
Category : AWEA News | Posted By : Chris Madison
26 Jan 2010   07:59:18 pm
Inexpensive and Predictable
Yesterday, the Amarillo Globe-News carried an opinion piece by Public Utilities Commission of Texas Chair Barry Smitherman on how Texas has become a national leader in wind power and how expanding transmission is needed. Two readers posted negative comments, one on costs and the other on a variety of complaints. Here is a response from Michael Goggin, AWEA's Electric Industry Analyst:

Quote :
I'd like to thank Mr. Smitherman for his very thoughtful article that logically explains why new transmission lines are essential for Texas to continue leading the country in renewable energy development as well in creating green jobs and associated economic development. I would like to respond to several concerns that were expressed in the comments, though:

1. Cheaper electricity - Before proceeding with the CREZ transmission plan, ERCOT performed a detailed analysis of how transmission development and associated wind development would affect consumers in Texas. It found that building the transmission would save consumers $1.7 billion per year by replacing the use of expensive natural gas with wind energy, repaying the $4.9 billion cost of the transmission in 2.9 years.

Bringing new wind energy online is critical to protecting Texas consumers from increases in the price of fossil fuels. Texas currently depends on natural gas to generate 49% of its electricity, and natural gas plants make up 71% of the state's generating capacity. From 1998 to 2006 natural gas prices in the state tripled, causing the price of electricity for the average residential consumer to increase from 7.6 cents/kWh to 12.9 cents/kWh-an increase of $64 monthly, or over $750 per year, for the average household.

2. Need for standby power - While the wind may slow or even stop at one location, over a large area like the state of Texas wind is a much more constant resource. In addition, wind output can be forecast at least a day in advance, giving grid operators plenty of time to bring other power plants online as needed, just as they do when electricity demand suddenly increases because the weather is hotter than forecast and millions of people turn on their air conditioners, or when a large coal or nuclear power plant experiences an outage and must shut down, often without notice. In contrast, wind energy output changes very slowly and can be forecast.

3. Wind turbines become net energy producers within a matter of months - The detailed, third-party verified accounting analysis linked below (here) shows that wind turbines produce enough power within the first several months of operation to more than make up for the energy that was used to produce them. Since a modern wind turbine will remain operational for decades, the energy and carbon dioxide savings produced over its lifetime are quite significant. In addition, around 98% of the land in a wind plant can continue serving as crop/rangeland, since the actual footprint of the wind turbines is very small.


Michael Goggin
American Wind Energy Association
Category : AWEA News | Posted By : Tom Gray
26 Jan 2010   06:54:05 pm
For wind, 2009 was a boom year, but we need RES for jobs
Today AWEA released its numbers for 2009, and the news was good-- record-breaking, in fact. For the year, the wind energy industry installed nearly 10,000 MW of new capacity, compared with last year's record-breaking total of 8,500 MW.

Denise Bode, AWEA's CEO, said the Recovery Act incentives played a big role in the wind industry's growth last year, calling it "a historic success in creating jobs, avoiding carbon, and protecting consumers." She added, “U.S. wind turbine manufacturing – the canary in the mine -- is down compared to last year’s levels, and needs long-term policy certainty and market pull in order to grow. We need to set hard targets, in the form of a national Renewable Electricity Standard (RES)."

Texas remains the leading state in wind energy installed. Others in the Top 5 are Iowa, California, Washington state and Minnesota.

Early last year, before the Recovery Act (ARRA), the industry anticipated that in 2009 wind power development might drop by as much as 50% from 2008 levels, with equivalent job losses. The clear commitment by the President to create clean energy jobs and the swift implementation of ARRA incentives by the Administration in mid-summer reversed the situation. Recovery Act incentives spurred the growth of construction, operations and maintenance, and management jobs, helping the industry to save and create jobs in those sectors.

The Obama White House in its Recovery Act blog, cited the wind industry as a job-creating engine of growth. "Across the country, communities are beginning to establish the clean energy industries that will power the 21st century global economy. "

Other facts from the 2009 wind industry report:

• The 9,922 MW installed last year expand the nation’s wind plant fleet by 39% and bring total wind power generating capacity in the U.S to over 35,000 MW.

• The five-year average annual growth rate for the industry is now 39%, up from 32% between 2003 and 2008.

• U.S. wind projects today generate enough to power the equivalent of 9.7 million homes, protecting consumers from fuel price volatility and strengthening our energy security.

• America’s wind power fleet will avoid an estimated 62 million tons of carbon dioxide annually, equivalent to taking 10.5 million cars off the road, and will conserve approximately 20 billion gallons of water annually, which would otherwise be withdrawn for steam or cooling in conventional power plants.

Even with these good numbers, the industry plans to keep pressing Congress to enact an RES in 2010, arguing that a renewable standard is a job-creating mechanism that has no impact on the federal budget.
Category : AWEA News | Posted By : Chris Madison
25 Jan 2010   04:30:44 pm
Texas PUC Commissioner explains how transmission works there
Texas is number one in wind energy, not least for its forward-looking approach to getting transmission built to serve its wind projects. Here is an excellent article by the state's Public Utilities Commission Chairman Barry T. Smitherman on how the commission is approaching the prospect of approving transmission in the Texas Panhandle.
Quote :
While the Panhandle has some of the best wind resources in North America, there aren't enough power lines to support meaningful wind development. Therefore, it's time to build the transmission lines needed to deliver this clean, Texas- based energy source to the rest of our growing state and continue to lower electricity prices in the process. And we must do it in a way that respects private property rights and maintains the natural beauty of the Texas Panhandle.
Category : AWEA News | Posted By : Chris Madison
 
1 2 3 4 Next
Dec 2009 January 2010 Feb 2010
S M T W T F S
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31       
Categories
AWEA News[448]
Recent
Wind powers clean energy in Europe
China Edges Out U.S. as Best Place to Invest in Renewables
Wind Factory Watch: Energetx: Michigan
Wind Factory Watch: Avanti: Wisconsin
Wind Factory Watch: Second Wind: Massachusetts
Wind Reduces Emissions, Redux
Wind and Transmission: Some Key Concepts
EIA Trims Forecast for Wind Energy's Growth
Renewable Energy Industry Leaders: RES = More Jobs
AWEA CEO Denise Bode hits back at fossil-funded smears
Archives
January 2010[20]
December 2009[20]
November 2009[25]
October 2009[25]
September 2009[36]
August 2009[39]
July 2009[52]
June 2009[44]
May 2009[47]
April 2009[44]
March 2009[55]
February 2009[41]
Search
Syndication