| Quietly, Wind Farms Spread Footprint In US 
    
 US: May 20, 2008
 
 
 ROCK PORT, Mo.- At 265 feet tall, four gleaming white wind turbines tower 
    over the tiny farm town of Rock Port, Missouri, like a landing of alien 
    intruders.
 
 
 But despite their imposing presence and the stark contrast with the rolling 
    pastures and corn fields, the turbines have received a warm welcome here.
 
 As Eric Chamberlain, who manages the wind farm for Wind Capital Group, eats 
    lunch in a local restaurant, local people greet him with a "Hey Windy!" and 
    many say they are happy to be using clean electricity.
 
 "It doesn't pollute the environment, it provides tax revenue, creates jobs. 
    I don't see a downside," said Chamberlain, who is something of a celebrity 
    in this town of 1,400 people.
 
 While growth in ethanol use as an alternative fuel has had a big impact on 
    rural America, wind power has also been growing steadily for the past three 
    years, with wind farms like this one springing up all over the windy expanse 
    of the Great Plains and beyond.
 
 While only 1 percent of US electricity comes from wind, it is attracting so 
    much support these days that many in the industry believe it is poised for a 
    growth spurt.
 
 "These are pretty heady times," said Randall Swisher, executive director of 
    the American Wind Energy Association, which held an investment conference 
    April 30 in Iowa that drew more than 600 attendees.
 
 "People are finally starting to see the data about what is happening to the 
    world's climate and that is really having an impact," said Swisher.
 
 Last year, a record 3,100 turbines were installed across 34 US states and 
    another 2,000 turbines are now under construction from California to 
    Massachussetts. In all, there are about more than 25,000 US turbines in 
    operation, an investment of $15 billion.
 
 On May 12, the US Energy Department said wind power could provide 20 percent 
    of US electricity by 2030, or 304 gigawatts, up from the current 16.8 
    gigawatts. Achieving that will require that wind turbine installations rise 
    to almost 7,000 a year by 2017, the department said.
 
 The industry appears poised to comply.
 
 In March, GE Energy announced it had secured a $1 billion deal to supply 750 
    megawatts of wind turbines -- enough to power about 200,000 households.
 
 In April, Nebraska officials broke ground on a wind farm that would be the 
    largest in that state, providing power for an estimated 25,000 homes.
 
 Also in April, the electric company Wisconsin Public Service Corp. won 
    approval from state regulators to construct a $251 million wind farm in Iowa 
    to help it meet a state mandate that it boost its supply of renewable power.
 
 In Texas, legendary oil man T. Boone Pickens has announced plans to invest 
    in a wind farm that would provide enough electricity for about 1 million 
    homes. Pickens' company, Mesa Power, this month ordered more than 600 wind 
    turbines from GE to get started.
 
 And, this year, Kansas became the first state in the nation to reject 
    expansion of coal-fired plants specifically because of global warming 
    worries. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius is recommending wind energy as an 
    alternative and successfully fought legislative efforts to overrule her.
 
 Wind Capital, based in St. Louis, Missouri, is a relatively small player. It 
    operates three wind farms in Missouri and has plans for projects in 10 US 
    states. Among its backers are Irish renewable energy company NTR Plc, which 
    invested $150 million in April, and a unit of Deere & Co with a $200 million 
    investment.
 
 The firm leases land from farmers on which to build its turbines. In Rock 
    Port, homes and businesses getting power from the municipal utility are now 
    using wind energy, backed by conventional electricity supplies from the 
    Missouri Joint Municipal Utility system.
 
 Increasingly, states are mandating that utilities obtain a portion of their 
    power through such renewable sources. Wind energy is also benefitting from a 
    Production Tax Credit federal subsidy of 2 cents per kilowatt hour of 
    electricity produced.
 
 According to the American Wind Energy Association, this amounts to $4.5 
    billion over 10 years.
 
 That is still far less than the $3.57 billion in annual subsidies enjoyed by 
    the ethanol distillers under a 51 cents per gallon Ethanol Excise Tax 
    Credit.
 
 
 GLOBAL WARMING WORRIES
 
 Supporters say along with helping the nation break a dependence on costly 
    oil, natural gas and coal, they see wind energy as part of a base for 
    "green-collar" employment, with jobs in manufacturing towers, blades and 
    other components.
 
 Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for 
    president, has proposed investing $150 billion over the next decade for 
    investments in alternative energy, including wind, solar and biodiesel. His 
    rival for the nomination, Sen. Hillary Clinton is also proposing a $150 
    billon ten-year investment in a "new energy future."
 
 Sen. John McCain, the Republican Party's presumed nominee for November's 
    presidential election, has also said he supports wind energy. McCain even 
    chose a wind-energy facility in Portland, Oregon, as the setting for a May 
    12 policy speech on global warming.
 
 Critics argue that imposing wind turbines spoil landscapes and disrupt 
    wildlife habitats, and such worries have dogged what would be the first US 
    offshore commercial wind-powered electricity generator, proposed to cover 28 
    square miles of shallow waters off the Massachusetts coast.
 
 As well, there is the reality that sometimes the wind just doesn't blow. 
    That means wind turbines cannot be relied on as a sole power source, but 
    rather as a supplement. And transmission lines and grid systems have yet to 
    be established across much of the windblown prairie.
 
 But the greatest concern currently for the wind energy industry is that for 
    all the public support, the Production Tax Credit is set to expire in 
    December. US lawmakers and President Bush have repeatedly failed to agree on 
    how to fund an extension.
 
 "We continue to push ahead because we believe that renewable energy does 
    make a lot of sense and even policy makers at some point will have to 
    realize something has to be done with $120 a barrel oil," said Michael 
    Polsky, CEO of Invenergy LLC, a Chicago-based wind developer.
 
 Since the $90 million Loess Hill wind farm in Rock Port came online in 
    April, it has been a point of pride for residents that, over a year, the 
    farm should generate enough power to exceed the town's consumption.
 
 Farmer Todd Herron, who receives $5,000 a year from Wind Capital Group for 
    hosting a spinning turbine on one of his corn fields, said there should be 
    no argument against using wind to make electricity instead of coal or 
    natural gas.
 
 "This is a rural farming community," said Herron. "Our lives depend on the 
    Earth. We've got to keep it in as good a shape as we can."
 
 (Reporting by Carey Gillam; Editing by Eddie Evans)
 
 
 Story by Carey Gillam
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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