Except in Charlestown, where wind energy is banned
Yale E360 DIGEST
EDITOR'S NOTE: Even before Donald Trump claimed, without a shred of evidence, that "wind mills cause cancer," the Charlestown Citizens Alliance got Charlestown to effectively ban the use of wind energy in any form, including small-scale residential use. Using their control of the Town Council, they passed an ordinance that created so many obstacles that not one single permit has been issued for residential wind energy since the ordinance was enacted. - Will Collette
Wind energy accounted for the bulk of new power-generating capacity in the United States last year, according to a trio of new reports from the Department of Energy. In total, wind supplied 42 percent of new U.S. capacity in 2020, while solar supplied 38 percent and natural gas the remaining 20 percent.
The
nearly 17,000 megawatts of land-based wind power installed in 2020 represent
$24.6 billion in investments, according to the Energy Department. Iowa,
Oklahoma, Wyoming, Illinois, and Missouri each installed more than 1,000
megawatts of capacity, while Texas added more than 4,000 megawatts.
Wind
energy now supplies more than 10 percent of in-state power generation in 16
states, including more than 30 percent in Kansas, Oklahoma, and North and South
Dakota, and 57 percent in Iowa.
“These reports contain such terrific news: the U.S. installed a record-breaking amount of land-based wind energy last year,” Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said in a statement. “They underscore both the progress made and the capacity for much more affordable wind power to come.”
The
rapid growth in wind power is being driven in part by falling prices. As
turbines grow larger, they produce more electricity at a lower cost per
kilowatt. Turbine prices have dropped from $1,800 per kilowatt in 2008 to
between $770 and $850 per kilowatt today, the Energy Department said.
While offshore wind is still a marginal source of power in the United States, it is expected to become a much larger source of electricity in the years ahead.
The Biden
administration has set a goal of 100 percent clean power by 2035, and, to reach
that target, it’s looking to deploy 30,000 megawatts of offshore wind energy by
2030. Eight East Coast states have set offshore wind goals that, combined,
amount to 40,000 megawatts by 2040.