Why US New Installed Wind Capacity Fell 99.98 Percent
Over the past decade, the wind industry has been the U.S. poster child for scalable renewable energy development. In the fourth quarter of 2012 alone, the U.S. added a record-breaking 8.38 GW of wind turbines, surpassing 60 GW of total installed capacity. To put this in perspective, the newly installed wind projects in that single, three-month period:
- Exceeded all pre-existing solar PV capacity in the U.S. (8.4 GW wind in Q4 vs. 7.2 GW cumulative solar PV total)
- Could produce roughly enough energy annually to match Ireland’s annual power consumption, and more than enough to power Uruguay, Costa Rica, and Luxembourg combined
Moreover, best-in-class wind resources are now cheaper and less volatile than natural gas, even with little to no state renewable incentives, as evidenced by recent pro-wind utility actions in Colorado and Alabama.
However, in the first quarter of 2013, the wind industry installed only 0.0016 GW in the U.S., a 99.98 percent drop from the previous quarter. In the second quarter of 2013, the industry did not install a single large turbine! Overall, the annual newly installed wind capacity fell by 92 percent in 2013. [remainder at source]
Other bad news today for Big Green:
Wave energy developer pulls plug on Oregon project. Developers have scrapped their plans to build the nation’s first large-scale wave energy project off the Oregon Coast, saying the costs were too high to make it work. Oregon Public Broadcasting, Oregon
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Wind farm plans in tatters after subsidy rethink. Plans to build wind farms in England and Scotland are being scrapped in the first sign that the Government's proposed cut to subsidies is taking effect. The Telegraph, United Kingdom
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Ohio wind turbine shutdown raises issue of migratory bird safety. Environmental groups have won what they call a victory for birds with the suspension of a plan to build a wind turbine in Ohio. Great Lakes Echo, Michigan
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