The boom in wind energy couldn’t be coming at a better time [View all]
The boom in wind energy couldnt be coming at a better time
Energy and Environment
By
Chris Mooney August 10 at 8:23 AM
The Obama administrations
Clean Power Plan, released last week, requires the country to use a lot more renewable energy by the year 2030 and a lot less coal. And right on time,
two new reports published Monday by the Department of Energy find that one key renewable sector wind is booming, a development that can only help matters when it comes to reducing carbon emissions.
The reports being released including the
2014 Wind Technologies Market Report, published by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory suggest that wind is being installed at a rapid rate, that its costs are plummeting, that its technologies are advancing, and that it is creating a growing number of jobs to boot.
Wind energy in the U.S. is now at 66 gigawatts of installed capacity, according to the report providing roughly 5 percent of total U.S. electricity demand. 66 gigawatts is enough electricity to power 17.5 million homes (a gigawatt is a billion watts). And, says Jose Zayas, who heads the wind and water power technologies office at the Energy Departments Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, 13 more gigawatts are now in the construction phase and set to come online by 2016.
For reference, in 2012, the U.S. had
1063 gigawatts of total installed electricity capacity, according to the Energy Information Administration.