2006 Wind Installations Offset More Than 40 Million Tons of CO2
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Global wind power capacity increased almost 26
percent in 2006. |
The 15,200 megawatts of new wind turbines installed worldwide last
year will generate enough clean electricity annually to offset the
carbon dioxide emissions of 23 average-sized U.S. coal-fired power
plants, according to
a new Vital
Signs Update from the Worldwatch Institute. The 43 million tons of
carbon dioxide displaced in 2006 is equivalent to the emissions of
7,200 megawatts of coal-fired power plants, or nearly 8 million
passenger cars.
Global wind power capacity increased almost 26 percent in 2006,
exceeding 74,200 megawatts by year�s end. Global investment in wind
power was roughly $22 billion in 2006, and in Europe and North
America, the power industry added more capacity in wind than it did in
coal and nuclear combined. The global market for wind equipment has
risen 74 percent in the past two years, leading to long backorders for
wind turbine equipment in much of the world.
"Wind power is on track to soon play a major role in reducing
fossil fuel dependence and slowing the buildup of greenhouse gases in
the atmosphere," according to Worldwatch Senior Researcher Janet Sawin.
"Already, the 43 million tons of carbon dioxide displaced by the new
wind plants installed last year equaled more than 5 percent of the
year’s growth in global emissions. If the wind market quadruples over
the next nine years—a highly plausible scenario—wind power could be
reducing global emissions growth by 20 percent in 2015."
Today, Germany, Spain, and the United States generate nearly 60
percent of the world’s wind power. But the industry is shifting
quickly from its European and North American roots to a new center of
gravity in the booming energy markets of Asia.
In 2006, India was the third largest wind turbine installer and
China took the fifth spot, thanks to a 170-percent increase in new
wind power installations over the previous year. More than 50 nations
now tap the wind to produce electricity, and 13 have more than 1,000
megawatts of wind capacity installed.
As efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions accelerate around the
globe, dozens of countries are working to add or strengthen laws that
support the development of wind power and other forms of renewable
energy. Rapid growth is expected in the next few years in several
countries, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, and Portugal.
“China and the United States will compete for leadership of the
global wind industry in the years ahead,” says Sawin. “Although the
U.S. industry got a 20-year head start, the Chinese are gaining ground
rapidly. Whichever nation wins, it is encouraging to see the world’s
top two coal burners fighting for the top spot in wind energy.”
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