
Library filed under General from Denmark
Danish island touts clean energy, but reality sets in
SAMSOE, Denmark -- In the late 1990s, Denmark set out to turn this farming and summer-vacation island in the Kattegat Sea into a showcase for clean energy. The government dangled generous financial subsidies. A former environmental studies teacher, Soren Hermansen, was hired to persuade residents to invest in wind turbines, solar panels, electric cars and giant straw-burning furnaces.
Wind Turbines in Copenhagen, Denmark (1)
Wind Turbines in Copenhagen, Denmark (2)
Wind Turbines in Copenhagen, Denmark (3)
Working Paper: Utility-scale Wind Power: Impacts of Increased Penetration

Why energy conservation trumps windmills

The Impact of Large Scale Wind Power Production On the Nordic Electricity System

Danish wind power – a personal view

Wind farms feel the chill of public rejection
They introduced the world to "environmentally friendly" energy, but now some of Europe's "greenest" countries are under pressure to backtrack on wind farms as public anger grows over their impact on the countryside.
Cap Gemini Ernst & Young launches European deregulation Index
In conclusion, this study has shown that in many countries deregulation is having the expected effect of increased competition leading to price reduction. However, it is evident that pricing in markets depends not just on the status of deregulation, but also on the broader aspects of competition. Key factors here include the balance of supply and demand, generation fuel costs, the learning process that new markets go through, competition within different market segments and the costs of access to transmission and distribution networks. Deregulation is a long-term process that requires sustained attention.
New Challenges for the Transmission System Operator

Wind Power: Capacity Factor, Intermittency, and what happens when the wind doesn’t blow?
