Documents
Category:
Energy Policy and USA
"In a number of European nations, offshore wind farms are well established. However, in the
United States, the concept is relatively new and an established approval process for offshore
wind farm permitting does not yet exist. This document identifies the approval process one
would need to take in order to site an offshore wind farm in coastal waters of the U.S.,
particularly North Carolina."
Editor's Note: The U.S. Minerals Management Service, a branch of the Interior Department, has review responsibility for offshore projects per the 2005 Energy Policy Act passed in May 2005.
Also filed under [
North Carolina]
Evaluating The Costs And Benefits Of Wind Energy- Overstated Benefits and Understated Costs Create False Hopes for Wind Power
May 5, 2003
by Glenn R. Schleede
Many people accept the well-publicized claim that windmills will be able to supply a significant share of our country’s growing requirements for electricity. They also believe that wind energy is environmentally benign and a way to avoid emissions from other sources of energy for electric generation. Political leaders in windy states have even been persuaded that “wind farms” will provide economic benefits, principally through rental payments to landowners.
As proposals to build “wind farms” have proliferated, however, the adverse impacts of wind energy are becoming clear to a growing number of citizens, consumers and taxpayers. They are learning that “wind energy” has adverse environmental, ecological, scenic and property value impacts. They are learning that many of the claimed benefits of wind energy are misleading or false, and that the true costs of wind energy are higher than advertised -- with those higher costs falling on taxpayers and electric customers.
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Why renewable energy is not cheap and not green
August 27, 1997
by Robert L. Bradley, Jr. for the Cato Institute
The stubborn competitive gap between renewable generation and its rivals explains why renewable-energy lobbyists on both the state and federal levels are trying to get governments to set quotas, and not just continue or expand current subsidies.
Wind Energy Potential in the United States
August, 1993
by D.L. Elliott and M.N. Schwartz, National Wind Technology Center
Although the nation's wind potential is very large, only part of it can be exploited
economically. The economic viability of wind power will vary from utility to utility.
Important factors not addressed in this study that influence land availability and wind
electric potential include production/demand match (seasonal and daily), transmission
and access constraints, public acceptance, and other technological and institutional
constraints.
Editor's Note: Though dated, this is a worthwhile read if read carefully.
Editor's Note: Though dated, this is a worthwhile read if read carefully.
U.S.A. - State Wind Resource Maps
by U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy - Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program
The Link Below will take you to a site where wind resource maps are available for most states.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
Wind Power: Capacity Factor, Intermittency, and what happens when the wind doesn’t blow?
by Renewable Energy Research Laboratory, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Wind turbines convert the kinetic energy in moving air into rotational energy, which in turn is converted to electricity. Since wind speeds vary from month to month and second to second, the amount of electricity wind can make varies constantly. Sometimes a wind turbine will make no power at all. This variability does affect the value of the wind power……
Editor’s Note: This ‘fact sheet’ is, on the whole, a comparatively fair report. The definitions provided for capacity factor, efficiency, reliability, dispatchability, and availability are useful. Its discussion of back-up generation, marginal emissions and Germany & Denmark, however, is disingenuous as is, to a lesser degree, its discussion of capacity factor and availability. IWA's comments (updated October '06) on these issues follow selected extracts from the 'fact sheet' below.