Since early recorded history, people have been harnessing the
energy of the wind. In the United States in the late 19th century,
settlers began using windmills to pump water for farms and ranches,
and later, to generate electricity for homes and industry.
Industrialism led to a gradual decline in the use of windmills. The
steam engine replaced European water-pumping windmills, and in the
1930s, the Rural Electrification Administration's programs brought
inexpensive electric power to most rural areas in the US. However,
industrialization also sparked the development of larger windmills,
wind turbines, to generate electricity.
After experiencing strong growth in the mid-1980s, the U.S. wind
industry hit a plateau during the electricity restructuring period
in the 1990s and then regained momentum in 1999. Industry growth
has since responded positively to policy incentives.
Although wind power currently provides only about 1% of U.S.
electricity needs, it is growing more rapidly than any other energy
source.
Wind power has negligible fuel costs, but high capital costs.
The estimated average cost per unit incorporates the cost of
construction of the turbine and transmission facilities, borrowed
funds, return to investors (including cost of risk), estimated
annual production, and other components, averaged over the
projected useful life of the equipment, which may be in excess of
twenty years.
Modern wind turbines fall into two basic groups: the
horizontal-axis variety and the vertical-axis design. Utility-scale
turbines range in size from 100 kilowatts to as large as several
megawatts. Larger turbines are grouped together into wind farms
which provide bulk power to the electrical grid. Single small
turbines (below 100 kilowatts) are used for homes,
telecommunications dishes, or water pumping. Small turbines are
sometimes used in connection with diesel generators, batteries, and
photovoltaic systems. These systems are called hybrid wind systems
and are typically used in remote, off-grid locations where a
connection to the utility grid is not available.
A key challenge for wind energy is that electricity production
depends on when winds blow rather than when consumers need power.
Wind's variability can create added expenses and complexity in
balancing supply and demand on the grid. Recent studies imply that
these integration costs do not become significant (5%-10% of
wholesale prices) until wind turbines account for 15%-30% of the
capacity in a given control area.
Opposition to wind power arises for environmental, aesthetic, or
aviation security reasons. New public-private partnerships have
been established to address more comprehensively problems with
avian (bird and bat) deaths resulting from wind farms. Some
stakeholders oppose the construction of wind plants for visual
reasons, especially in pristine or highly-valued areas.
Wind technology has improved significantly over the past two
decades, and wind energy has become increasingly competitive with
other power generation options. Federal wind power policy has
centered primarily on the production tax credit (PTC), a business
incentive to operate wind facilities. The PTC was extended through
2013. While wind energy still depends on federal tax incentives to
compete, key uncertainties like climate policy, fossil fuel prices,
and technology progress could dominate future cost
competitiveness.
Full Table of Contents, Sample Sections, and additional
resources are available on the book's web site: www.TCNWind.com
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