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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 15, 2006
Contact:
Kathy Belyeu (202) 383-2520
Christine Real de Azua (202) 383-2508

ANNUAL INDUSTRY RANKINGS DEMONSTRATE CONTINUED
GROWTH OF WIND ENERGY IN THE UNITED STATES

Xcel Energy Now Largest Purchaser of
Wind-Generated Electricity in U.S.

The American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) today released its annual industry rankings of wind energy development in the United States. The rankings, which include the leading states for wind energy development, the suppliers of wind energy turbines, and owners and purchasers of wind energy, provide a useful measure of the size and breadth of the American wind energy industry. The industry easily broke earlier records in 2005, installing over 2,400 megawatts (MW) or over $3 billion worth of new generating equipment in 22 states. The final tally of 2,431 MW boosted the cumulative U.S. installed wind power fleet by over 35%, bringing the industry's total generating capacity to 9,149 MW,1 enough to serve the equivalent of 2.3 million homes.

As President Bush stated recently on his Advanced Energy Initiative tour, “areas with good wind resources have the potential to supply up to 20 percent of the electricity consumption of the United States.”

The annual industry rankings tell the rest of the story, providing a standard reference point for the burgeoning growth of the wind industry in the U.S. Wind continues to be one of the fastest growing energy sources in the world and in the nation.

“Wind energy’s continuing expansion, as reflected in these rankings, provides fresh evidence that it is capable of contributing to the nation’s electricity supply near the level of conventional power sources,” said AWEA executive director Randall Swisher. “Wind energy is a clean, safe, domestic, abundant, and affordable energy source, and one of the best options we have for new power generation today.”

The rankings (as of December 31, 2005) include the following:


States with most wind energy installed, by capacity (MW):

#1 California - 2,150 MW
#2 Texas - 1,995 MW
#3 Iowa - 836 MW
#4 Minnesota - 744 MW
#5 Oklahoma – 475 MW
#6 New Mexico – 407 MW
#7 Washington – 390 MW
#8 Oregon – 338 MW
#9 Wyoming – 288 MW
#10 Kansas – 264 MW

Capacity – measured in kilowatts (kW) or megawatts (MW) – measures a turbine’s generating potential. A 1.5-MW wind turbine operating in a good wind resource area can be expected to generate over 4 million kWh per year or enough to supply 400 average homes.

As of the end of 2005, California was still the state with the most wind power capacity installed, but Texas gained fast last year, and is expected to overtake California in 2006. California, where the U.S. wind industry began, has been the state with the largest wind power capacity since electricity-generating wind turbines were first installed there in 1981.

Two large projects were installed in Oklahoma in 2005 – the 147-MW Weatherford Wind Energy Center and the 151-MW Blue Canyon II project. Wyoming, which was #5 on last year’s ranking, was overtaken not only by Oklahoma, but also New Mexico (which added 140 MW of wind power in 2005), Washington (added 149 MW), and Oregon (75 MW).


States with most wind energy resource (in billion kWh)

#1 North Dakota – 1,210
#2 Texas – 1,190
#3 Kansas – 1,070
#4 South Dakota – 1,030
#5 Montana – 1,020

Source: An Assessment of the Available Windy Land Area and Wind Energy Potential in the Contiguous United States, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, 1991.

Although California does have some areas with a very good wind resource, as a state, it doesn’t make it into the top 10. The windiest states in the country are, for the most part, in the Great Plains. This list factors in environmental and land use exclusions for wind class of three and higher.

States with a combination of good, developable windy areas and good wind energy policy are attracting the most investment.


Largest wind farms operating in the U.S. (MW):

# 1 Stateline, Oregon/Washington - 300 MW

# 2 King Mountain, Texas - 278 MW

# 3 Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center, Texas – 210 MW

# 4 New Mexico Wind Energy Center, New Mexico - 204 MW

# 5 Storm Lake, Iowa - 193 MW

Wind farms have been getting bigger to take advantage of some economies of scale. The Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center in Taylor County, Tex., joined the ranks of the top five largest single wind farms in 2005. AWEA considers a wind farm to be one project if it is built and owned by the same company or companies and is geographically contiguous.


Manufacturers’ installed capacity for the past five years:

2005

GE Energy

1,433 MW

Vestas

700 MW

Mitsubishi

190 MW

Suzlon

55 MW

Gamesa

50 MW

2004

GE Energy

171 MW

Mitsubishi

120 MW

Vestas

97 MW

   

2003

GE Energy

903 MW

Vestas

359 MW

Mitsubishi 201 MW

NEG Micon*

129 MW

Gamesa

56 MW

2002

Vestas

175

NEG Micon*

98 MW

GE Energy

62 MW

Mitsubishi

61 MW

Bonus*

48 MW

2001

Vestas

653 MW

Enron Wind*

418 MW

Bonus*

278 MW

Mitsubishi

221 MW

NEG Micon*

119 MW

GE Energy dominated the U.S. market in 2005. Its turbines accounted for nearly 60% of the new capacity added. Vestas turbines accounted for nearly 30%. Mitsubishi, Suzlon, and Gamesa round out the top five. Suzlon, Gamesa, and Clipper Wind have recently established manufacturing facilities in the U.S. As new entrants come into the U.S. market, it is expected to become less concentrated.

*NEG Micon has now merged with Vestas; Siemens purchased Bonus; and GE Energy purchased the wind turbine manufacturing component of Enron Wind.

Leading owners of wind energy installations in the U.S. (MW) (as of 12/31/05)

#1 FPL Energy – 3,192 MW

#2 PPM Energy – 518 MW

#3 MidAmerican Energy – 360.5 MW

#4 Caithness Energy – 346 MW

#5 Babcock & Brown – 319 MW

FPL Energy is still far and away the largest owner of wind energy facilities in the U.S. The company’s fleet also grew fastest in 2005, adding over 500 MW of new capacity. PPM Energy moved from fifth place last year to second today with its addition of nearly 400 MW of new capacity last year. The company has stated a goal of having 2,300 MW of wind generation in operation by 2010. MidAmerican Energy moved into third place in terms of ownership, leading the way in terms of utilities building and owning wind power for their customers’ use.

Utilities/power companies that buy the most wholesale wind power (MW purchased):

#1 Xcel Energy purchases the output from 1,048 MW of wind power

#2 Southern California Edison purchases the output from 1,021 MW of wind power

#3 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. purchases the output from 680 MW

#4 PPM Energy purchases the output from 606 MW (for resale)

#5 TXU purchases the output from 580 MW

For the first time in the recent history of the U.S. wind energy industry, Southern California Edison (SCE) has been overtaken as the largest purchaser of wind energy. Xcel Energy, with operations in Minnesota, Colorado, and Texas, was purchasing power from 1,048 MW of wind power as of the end of 2005, edging out SCE, which was purchasing the output from 1,021 MW of wind. The future competition looks likely to be fierce: Xcel Energy has announced that it intends to purchase the power output from 775 MW of new wind power capacity for its Colorado system by 2007; SCE is now under contract to purchase the output from 393 MW of new wind power capacity when it is built.


Net annual installed capacity of wind power nationally over the past five years:

2005 – 2,424 MW (2,431 MW installed; 7 MW decommissioned)

2004 – 372 MW

2003 – 1,667 MW

2002 – 411 MW

2001 – 1,697 MW

The roller-coaster pattern that wind energy installations have experienced in the last five years is a result of the two-year extensions of the eligibility period for the wind energy production tax credit. In 2005, for the first time in the credit’s history, Congress extended the eligibility period before it was allowed to expire, which will allow the industry to use the momentum from 2005 to make this year even bigger. Many states are requiring more renewable energy to be built to garner its clean energy and job creation benefits. In addition, utilities are becoming more interested in wind power to diversify their power sources and take advantage of a fuel-free, abundant resource. For all these reasons, installations are expected to top 3,000 MW in 2006.

1) 7.45 MW of capacity was reported decommissioned in 2005. Capacity installed as of the end of 2004 was adjusted to 6,725 MW from 6,740 MW due to more information about decommissionings and duplicates.

AWEA, formed in 1974, is the national trade association of the U.S. wind energy industry. The association's membership includes turbine manufacturers, wind project developers, utilities, academicians, and interested individuals. More information on wind energy is available at the AWEA web site: www.awea.org.

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