New Installations Put Wind Energy Industry On Track for Record Year
The U.S. wind energy industry stayed on pace for another record year, with Texas breezing past historic leader California as the top state in cumulative wind power capacity for the first time, according to the American Wind Energy Association’s (AWEA) Second Quarter Market Report.
The U.S. wind energy industry stayed on pace for another record year, with Texas breezing past historic leader California as the top state in cumulative wind power capacity for the first time, according to the American Wind Energy Association’s (AWEA) Second Quarter Market Report.
The report also shows that U.S. developers brought online a capacity total of 822 megawatts (MW) in the first half of the year. With the strong growth, the U.S.’s cumulative wind power capacity surged to 9,971 MW—within close striking distance of the 10-gigawatt (10,000-MW) milestone.
Texas ’s cumulative total now stands at 2,370 MW of capacity—enough to power over 600,000 average American homes—followed by California’s 2,323 MW. Texas edged ahead of California by adding a total of 375 MW, about half of the total amount installed in the country since the beginning of the year.
Historically, California has led the nation in installed wind capacity uninterruptedly for nearly 25 years AWEA says, ever since the first wind farms were built there in late 1981, and at one time the Golden State was host to more than 80 percent of the wind capacity in the entire world. However, energy and electricity prices tanked during the global oil glut of the 1980s, putting California’s wind power boom on hold.
Development activity in California has not exactly been dormant, with PPM Energy’s (PPM) 150-MW Shiloh Wind Project in Solano County and the Sacramento Municipal Utility District’s 24-MW project near Rio Vista coming online earlier in the year.
AWEA forecasts that the industry remains on track to install more than 3,000 MW of new wind capacity, which would decisively eclipse the previous record of 2,431 MW set in 2005. The U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA) estimates that slightly less than 10,000 MW of new natural gas plants will be brought online in 2006, and that less than 400 MW of new coal- and oil-fired generating plants will be added, making wind power second only to natural gas in new capacity and new power generation for the second year in a row.
“Wind energy works, for America’s economy, environment, and energy security,” says AWEA Executive Director Randall Swisher. “Continuing the federal commitment to this clean energy source will keep us on the road to a sustainable energy future.”
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