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Wind Power Maintains Capacity for Exponential Growth

Jan 24, 2007 12:17 PM
By Mark Valentine, Technical Editor, Power Electronics Technology



Wind power generating capacity in the U.S. increased by 27% to 11,603 MW in 2006 and is expected to increase an additional 26% in 2007, according to a market forecast released by the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). AWEA gathers the data for its analysis each January by contacting wind farm developers and turbine manufacturers around the country.

The U.S. wind energy industry installed 2454 MW of generating capacity in 2006, an investment of approximately $4 billion. On average, 1 MW of wind-generated electric capacity is sufficient to provide electricity for about 250 to 300 homes.

For the past two years, wind has been the second-largest source of increases to power generation within the U.S., the first being natural gas. According to Randall Swisher, Executive Director of the AWEA, the remoteness and sparseness of the electrical grid at favorable locations are the chief factors limiting the development of additional wind power capacity.

Utility-scale turbines have been installed in a total of 20 states across the country, from Maine to New Mexico to Alaska. The top five states for capacity added in 2006 are Texas (774 MW), Washington (428 MW), California (212 MW), New York (185 MW) and Minnesota (150 MW).

Further Wind Power Reading:

·Wind Will Power Component Development Too
·U.S. Wind Energy Capacity Reaches 10,000 MW

According to the annual industry outlook that made these projections, Texas accounted for nearly a third of the wind power installed in 2006, taking over the lead from California in cumulative installed capacity. Texas also hosts the world’s single largest operating wind farm, the 735-MW Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center, located in Nolan and Taylor counties.

However, Swisher states that California has successfully replaced some of its older wind turbines with larger models in a process referred to in the industry as “re-powering”. Given that early machines having a generating capacity of 65 kW to 300 kW can be potentially replaced with newer units rated at 1.5 MW or more, additional capacity derived from re-powering can be significant without the legal complications associated with an undeveloped location.

AWEA noted that there were wind-industry manufacturing facilities that opened in Iowa, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania in 2006. Announcements of additional facilities are expected in 2007. Wind power has also attracted the support of state and federal government legislatures.


April 2008
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