WIND ENERGY INDUSTRY INSTALLS 1,400 MW IN 3RD QUARTER OF WHAT WILL BE ANOTHER RECORD YEAR

Highlights of the report/project installations:

* Texas, reaping the benefits of its excellent resource and a proactive transmission expansion policy, added 693 MW – the most capacity of any state in the 3rd quarter. Texas moved into the 6 GW category, which propels it into the ranks of global leaders. Only Germany, India and Spain had more capacity installed at the end of last year.

* West Virginia: The state with the fastest capacity growth was West Virginia, which more than tripled its existing capacity with the addition of a 164-MW project; another 100-MW project is scheduled to come online in West Virginia by the end of the year.

* Utah added its first multi-turbine project, the 9-turbine Spanish Fork project.

* The Dakotas: Acciona Energy, a manufacturer, brought its first U.S. turbines online at a 120-turbine project straddling the North Dakota/South Dakota border.

Highlights of the report/manufacturing investment:

* In August, Vestas announced plans to further expand its American manufacturing presence with new blade and nacelle assembly factories in Brighton, Colo. (the nacelle is the structure that sits at the top of a tower. It can be as large as a school bus, and houses the generator). When fully operational in 2010, the blade factory is expected to employ 650 people and the nacelle factory is expected to employ an additional 700.

* In September, TPI Composites opened a new production facility in Newton, Iowa, for turbine blades for the U.S. market. At full capacity, TPI Iowa plans to employ 500 associates, giving the Midwestern city an economic boost.

Based on projections for the remainder of the year, 2008 will mark the fourth year in a row that new capacity installations have set records, but that is not expected to continue next year. With some 8,000 MW already under construction for completion this year or next, the industry remains relatively strong. But because of the late extension of the wind production tax credit and the evolving financial crisis, new construction starts are expected to slow in 2009.

The steps that the new Administration and Congress take to promote renewable energy will therefore be critical. Long-term, stable policies are needed to take full advantage of the industry’s role in stimulating job creation and economic development, and to support growth of domestic turbine and component manufacturing, which will be one of the leading sources of new manufacturing jobs in the 21st century. These policies include a long-term extension of the wind production tax credit (the recent financial rescue package extended the credit for one year only), a federal renewable energy standard, strong climate change legislation, and investment in new transmission infrastructure.

The report is available at www.awea.org/publications/reports/3Q08.pdf.

Check Also

Green energy leaf 002

B20 Biofuel

Robison to Offer Customers B20 BioFuel to Save Money and the Environment  The Leading home …

Leave a Reply