Wind: The Center of the Plan B Economy
For many years, a small handful of countries dominated growth in wind
power, but this is changing as the industry goes global, with more than
70 countries now developing wind resources. Between 2000 and 2010,
world wind electric generating capacity increased at a frenetic pace
from 17,000 megawatts to nearly 200,000 megawatts.
Measured by share of electricity supplied by wind, Denmark is the
leading nation at 21 percent. Three north German states now get 40
percent or more of their electricity from wind. For Germany as a whole,
the figure is 8 percent—and climbing. And in the state of Iowa, enough
wind turbines came online in the last few years to produce up to 20
percent of that state’s electricity.
In terms of sheer volume, the United States leads the world with 35,000
megawatts of wind generating capacity, followed by China and Germany
with 26,000 megawatts each. Texas, long the leading U.S. oil-producing
state, is now also the nation’s leading generator of electricity from
wind. It has 9,700 megawatts of wind generating capacity online, 370
megawatts more under construction, and a huge amount under development.
If all of the wind farms projected for 2025 are completed, Texas will
have 38,000 megawatts of wind generating capacity—the equivalent of 38
coal-fired power plants. This would satisfy roughly 90 percent of the
current residential electricity needs of the state’s 25 million people.
In July 2010, ground was broken for the Alta Wind Energy Center (AWEC)
in the Tehachapi Pass, some 75 miles north of Los Angeles, California.
At 1,550 megawatts, it will be the largest U.S. wind farm. The AWEC is
part of what will eventually be 4,500 megawatts of renewable power
generation, enough to supply electricity to some 3 million homes.
Since wind turbines occupy only 1 percent of the land covered by a wind
farm, farmers and ranchers can continue to grow grain and graze cattle
on land devoted to wind farms. In effect, they double-crop their land,
simultaneously harvesting electricity and wheat, corn, or cattle. With
no investment on their part, farmers and ranchers typically receive
$3,000–10,000 a year in royalties for each wind turbine on their land.
For thousands of ranchers in the U.S. Great Plains, wind royalties will
dwarf their net earnings from cattle sales.
In considering the energy productivity of land, wind turbines are in a
class by themselves. For example, an acre of land in northern Iowa
planted in corn can yield $1,000 worth of ethanol per year. That same
acre used to site a wind turbine can produce $300,000 worth of
electricity per year. This helps explain why investors find wind farms
so attractive.
Impressive though U.S. wind energy growth is, the expansion now under
way in China is even more so. China has enough onshore harnessable wind
energy to raise its current electricity consumption 16-fold. Today, most
of China’s 26,000 megawatts of wind generating capacity come from 50- to
100-megawatt wind farms. Beyond the many other wind farms of that size
that are on the way, China’s new Wind Base program is creating seven
wind mega-complexes of 10 to 38 gigawatts each in six provinces (1
gigawatt equals 1,000 megawatts). When completed, these complexes will
have a generating capacity of more than 130 gigawatts. This is
equivalent to building one new coal plant per week for two and a half
years.
Of these 130 gigawatts, 7 gigawatts will be in the coastal waters of
Jiangsu Province, one of China’s most highly industrialized provinces.
China is planning a total of 23 gigawatts of offshore wind generating
capacity. The country’s first major offshore project, the 102-megawatt
Donghai Bridge Wind Farm near Shanghai, is already in operation.
In Europe, which now has 2,400 megawatts of offshore wind online, wind
developers are planning 140 gigawatts of offshore wind generating
capacity, mostly in the North Sea. There is enough harnessable wind
energy in offshore Europe to satisfy the continent’s needs seven times
over.
In September 2010, the Scottish government announced that it was
replacing its goal of 50 percent renewable electricity by 2020 with a
new goal of 80 percent. By 2025, Scotland expects renewables to meet all
of its electricity needs. Much of the new capacity will be provided by
offshore wind.
Denmark is looking to push the wind share of its electricity to 50
percent by 2025, with most of the additional power coming from offshore.
In contemplating this prospect, Danish planners have turned conventional
energy policy upside down. They plan to use wind as the mainstay of
their electrical generating system and to use fossil-fuel-generated
power to fill in when the wind dies down.
Spain, which has 19,000 megawatts of wind-generating capacity for its 45
million people, got 14 percent of its electricity from wind in 2009. On
November 8th of that year, strong winds across Spain enabled wind
turbines to supply 53 percent of the country’s electricity over a
five-hour stretch. London Times reporter Graham Keeley
wrote from Barcelona that “the towering white wind turbines which
loom over Castilla-La Mancha—home of Cervantes’s hero, Don Quixote—and
which dominate other parts of Spain, set a new record in wind energy
production.”
In 2007, when Turkey issued a request for proposals to build wind farms,
it received bids to build a staggering 78,000 megawatts of wind
generating capacity, far beyond its 41,000 megawatts of total electrical
generating capacity. Having selected 7,000 megawatts of the most
promising proposals, the government is issuing construction permits.
In wind-rich Canada, Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta are the leaders in
installed capacity. Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, has
received applications for offshore wind development rights on its side
of the Great Lakes that could result in some 21,000 megawatts of
generating capacity. The provincial goal is to back out all coal-fired
power by 2014.
On the U.S. side of Lake Ontario, New York State is also requesting
proposals. Several of the seven other states that border the Great Lakes
are planning to harness lake winds.
Earth Policy Institute’s
Plan B to save
civilization has four components: stabilizing climate, restoring
earth’s natural support systems, stabilizing population, and eradicating
poverty. At the heart of the plan is a crash program to develop 4,000
gigawatts (4 million megawatts) of wind generating capacity by 2020,
enough to cover over half of
world electricity consumption in the Plan B economy. This will
require a near doubling of capacity every two years, up from a doubling
every three years over the last decade.
This climate-stabilizing initiative would mean the installation of 2
million wind turbines of 2 megawatts each. Manufacturing 2 million wind
turbines over the next 10 years sounds intimidating—until it is compared
with the 70 million automobiles the world produces each year.
At $3 million per installed turbine, the 2 million turbines would mean
spending $600 billion per year worldwide between now and 2020. This
compares with world oil and gas capital expenditures that are projected
to double from $800 billion in 2010 to $1.6 trillion in 2015.
Adapted from Chapter 9, “Harnessing Wind, Solar, and Geothermal Energy”
in Lester R. Brown,
World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic
Collapse (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2011), available
online at
www.earth-policy.org/books/wote.
http://www.earth-policy.org/book_bytes/2011/wotech9_ss2
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