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HARNESSING THE WIND
Chapter 9. Cutting Carbon Emissions in Half
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
Shifting to renewable sources of energy, such as wind power, opens
up vast new opportunities for lowering fossil fuel dependence. Wind
offers a powerful alternative to fossil fuelsa
way of dramatically cutting carbon emissions. Wind energy is abundant,
inexhaustible, cheap, widely distributed, climate-benign, and cleanwhich
is why it has been the world's fastest-growing energy source over
the last decade.
The modern wind industry was born in California in the early 1980s
as a result of a federal tax credit for renewable energy, combined
with a generous state tax credit. For most of the industry's first
15 years, growth was relatively slow, but in recent years, generating
capacity has exploded. In 1995, world wind-generating capacity was
4,800 megawatts. By the end of 2002, it had increased sixfold to
31,100 megawatts. (See Figure 9-1.) World wind generating capacity
today is sufficient to meet the residential needs of Norway, Sweden,
Finland, Denmark, and Belgium combined.13
Germany, with over 12,000 megawatts of wind power at the end of
2002, leads the world in generating capacity. Spain and the United
States, at 4,800 and 4,700 megawatts, are second and third. Tiny
Denmark is fourth with 2,900 megawatts, and India is fifth with
1,700 megawatts. Today Denmark gets 18 percent of its electricity
from wind. In Schleswig-Holstein, the northernmost state in Germany,
the figure is 28 percent. And in Spain's northern industrial province
of Navarra, it is 22 percent. Although a score of countries now
generate electricity from wind, a second wave of major players is
coming onto the field, including the United Kingdom, France, Italy,
Brazil, and China.14
Wind energy is both abundant and widely distributed. In densely
populated Europe, there is enough easily accessible offshore wind
energy to meet all of the region's electricity needs. China can
easily double its current electricity generation from wind alone.
In the United States, a national wind resource inventory published
in 1991 indicated that there is enough harnessable wind energy in
just three of the 50 statesNorth
Dakota, Kansas, and Texasto
satisfy national electricity needs. But this now greatly understates
U.S. potential. Recent advances in wind turbine design and size,
enabling the turbines to operate at lower wind speeds and to harness
the wind's energy more efficiently and at greater heights, have
dramatically expanded the harnessable wind resource.15
Wind is also clean. Wind energy does not produce sulfur dioxide
emissions or nitrous oxides to cause acid rain. Nor are there any
emissions of health-threatening mercury that come from coal-fired
power plants. No mountains are leveled, no streams are polluted,
and there are no deaths from black lung disease. Wind does not disrupt
the earth's climate.
One of the great attractions of wind is that it is inexhaustible.
Once wind farms are developed, they can operate indefinitely simply
by replacing equipment parts as they wear out. In contrast to oil,
which is eventually depleted, wind is inexhaustible. Wind is also
cheap. Advances in wind turbine design, drawing heavily on the technologies
of the aerospace industry, have dropped the cost of wind power from
38¢ per kilowatt-hour in the early 1980s to less than 4¢ at prime
wind sites in 2001. Some recent long-term wind supply contracts
were signed at 3¢ per kilowatt-hour. The cost of wind-generated
electricity is well below that of nuclear power. On prime wind sites,
it can now undercut coal and compete with gas, currently the cheapest
source of electricity generation.16
Even more exciting, with each doubling of world generating capacity,
costs fall by 15 percent. With recent growth rates of 31 percent
a year, costs are dropping by 15 percent every 30 months or so.
While natural gas prices are highly volatile, the costs of wind
are declining. And there is no OPEC for wind.17
Cheap electricity from wind brings the option of electrolyzing water
to produce hydrogen, which offers a way of both storing wind energy
and transporting it via pipelines. It can be stored and used in
lieu of natural gas in power plants to provide electricity when
the wind ebbs.
Hydrogen is also the fuel of choice for the new fuel cell engines
that every major automobile manufacturer is now working on. Honda
and Toyota both made it to the market with their first fuel cell-powered
automobiles at the end of 2002. DaimlerChrysler plans to be in the
market in 2003 and Ford in 2004. In a country like the United States,
the advances in wind turbine design and the evolution of fuel cells
hold out the hope that farmers and ranchers, who own most of the
country's wind rights, could one day be supplying not only the country's
electricity, but much of the fuel for its cars as well.18
Countries that are rich in wind could end up exporting hydrogen
in liquefied form in the same way that natural gas is liquefied
and exported today. Among the countries that are both richly endowed
in wind and rather sparsely populated are Canada, Argentina (with
world-class winds in Patagonia), and Russia. Eastern Siberia could
supply vast amounts of hydrogen to densely populated, heavily industrialized
China, South Korea, and Japan.
Given the enormous wind-generation potential and the associated
benefits of climate stabilization, it is time to consider an all-out
effort to develop wind resources. Instead of doubling every 30 months
or so, perhaps we should be doubling wind electric generation each
year for the next several years, much as the number of computers
linked to the Internet doubled each year from 1985 to 1995. If this
were to happen, then costs would drop precipitously, giving wind-generated
electricity an even greater advantage over power from fossil fuels.19
Energy consultant Harry Braun made an interesting proposal at a
Hydrogen Roundtable in April 2003 for quickly shifting to a wind/hydrogen
economy. From a manufacturing point of view, he noted, wind turbines
are similar to automobiles: each has a brake, a gearbox, an electrical
generator, and an electronic control system. Braun noted that if
wind turbines are mass-producedlike automobiles, the capital costs
of wind-generated electricity would drop from $1,000 a kilowatt
to roughly $300, reducing the cost of electricity to 1¢ or 2¢ per
kilowatt-hour.20
Rather than wait for fuel cell engines, Braun suggests using hydrogen
in internal combustion engines of the sort developed by BMW. He
notes that converting a gasoline engine to hydrogen is relatively
simple and inexpensive. This would also facilitate the early development
of hydrogen stations in wind-rich areas while waiting for the mass
production of fuel cell cars. Braun calculates that the electrolysis
of water to produce hydrogen and its liquefication, along with the
high efficiency of a hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine,
would bring the cost of hydrogen down to $1.40 per equivalent gallon
of gasoline. Assembly-line production of wind turbines at "wartime"
speed would quickly end urban air pollution, oil spills, and the
need for oil wars.21
The incentives for such a growth could come in part from simply
restructuring global energy subsidies-shifting the $210 billion
in annual fossil fuel subsidies to the development of wind energy,
hydrogen generators, and the provision of kits to convert engines
from gasoline to hydrogen. The investment capital could come from
private capital markets but also from companies already in the energy
business. Shell, for example, has become a major player in the world
wind energy economy. BP has also begun to invest in wind power.
Other major corporations now in the wind power business include
General Electric and ABB. BP's planned investment of $15 billion
in developing oil resources in the Gulf of Mexico could also be
used to develop 15,000 megawatts of wind-generating capacity, enough
to satisfy the residential needs of 15 million people in industrial
countries.22
These goals may seem farfetched, but here and there around the world
ambitious efforts are beginning to take shape. As noted earlier,
Germany announced at international climate discussions in India
in October 2002 that it wants to cut its greenhouse gas emissions
40 percent by 2020. It is proposing a 30-percent cut throughout
Europe by that date. Developing the continent's offshore and onshore
wind energy resources will be at the heart of this carbon reduction
effort.23
In the United States, a 3,000-megawatt wind farm is in the early
planning stages. Located in South Dakota near the Iowa border, it
is being initiated by Dehlsen Associates, led by James Dehlsen,
a wind energy pioneer in California. Designed to feed power into
the industrial Midwest around Chicago, this project is not only
large by wind power standards, it is one of the largest energy projects
of any kind in the world today.24
Cape Wind is planning a 420-megawatt wind farm off the coast of
Cape Cod, Massachusetts. And a newly formed energy company, called
Winergy, has plans for some 9,000 megawatts in a network of wind
farms stretching along the Atlantic coast. These are but a few of
the more ambitious wind energy projects that are now beginning to
emerge in the United States, a country rich in wind energy.25
The question is not whether wind is a potentially powerful technology
that can be used to stabilize climate. It is. But will we develop
it fast enough to head off economically disruptive climate change?

ENDNOTES
13. Wind power history in Peter Asmus, Reaping the Wind (Washington,
DC: Island Press, 2000); figure from Janet L. Sawin, "Wind Power's
Rapid Growth Continues," in Worldwatch Institute, Vital Signs 2003
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2003), pp. 38-39, updated with
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) and EWEA estimates in AWEA,
Global Wind Energy Market Report (Washington, DC: updated March
2003); residential needs based on 1 megawatt needed for 350 households
or about 1,000 people, using populations from United Nations, World
Population Prospects: The 2002 Revision (New York: February 2003).
14. AWEA, op. cit. note 13; Soren Krohn, "Wind Energy Policy in
Denmark: Status 2002," Danish Wind Energy Association, at www.windpower.org/articles/energypo.htm,
February 2002; Schleswig-Holstein in AWEA, Global Wind Energy Market
Report (Washington, DC: March 2002), p. 3; Navarra from Felix Avia
Aranda and Ignacio Cruz Cruz, "Breezing Ahead: The Spanish Wind
Energy Market," Renewable Energy World, May-June 2000.
15. Offshore wind energy in Europe from EWEA and Greenpeace, Wind
Force 12: A Blueprint to Achieve 12% of the World's Electricity
From Wind Power by 2020 (Brussels and Amsterdam: 2002), pp. 25-26.
According to Debra Lew and Jeffrey Logan, "Energizing China's Wind
Power Sector," Pacific Northwest Laboratory, March 2001, at www.pnl.gov/
china/ChinaWnd.htm, China has at least 275 gigawatts of exploitable
wind potential, roughly equal to the current installed electrical
capacity in China as reported by DOE, EIA, "China," EIA Country
Analysis Briefs, at www.eia. doe.gov/emeu/cabs, updated June 2002.
According to the 1991 assessment of wind energy resources in the
United States, Texas, North Dakota, and Kansas would be able to
produce 3,470 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), approaching the 3,779
billion kWh used by the United States in 2001, as reported by DOE,
EIA, "United States," EIA Country Analysis Briefs, updated November
2002. See D. L. Elliott, L. L. Wendell, and G. L. Gower, An Assessment
of the Available Windy Land Area and Wind Energy Potential in the
Contiguous United States (Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest Laboratory,
1991); maps available from AWEA at www.awea.org/projects/index.html,
last updated 23 January 2003.
16. Larry Flowers, NREL, "Wind Power Update," at www.eren.doe.gov/windpoweringamerica/pdfs/wpa/wpa_update.pdf,
viewed 19 June 2002; Glenn Hasek, "Powering the Future," Industry
Week, 1 May 2000.
17. David Milborrow, "Size Matters-Getting Bigger and Cheaper,"
Windpower Monthly, January 2003, pp. 35-38.
18. Lawrence D. Burns, J. Byron McCormick, and Christopher E. Borroni-Bird,
"Vehicle of Change," Scientific American, October 2002, pp. 64-73;
Honda and Toyota in "Water Electrolysis-No Hydrocarbons Needed,"
interview with John Slangerup, President and CEO, Stuart Energy
Systems of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, World Fuels Today, 28 January
2003; DaimlerChrysler in Ballard Power Systems, Inc., "Ballard Fuel
Cell Engines to Power Sixty Mercedes-Benz Vehicles in Global Fleet
Demonstrations," news release (Burnaby, BC, Canada: 7 October 2002);
Ford Motor Company, "Ford Combines Hybrid and Fuel Cell Technology
in All-New Focus Sedan," press release (Detroit, MI: 11 June 2002).
19. Internet from Molly O. Sheehan, "Communications Networks Expand,"
in Worldwatch Institute, op. cit. note 13, pp. 60-61.
20. Harry Braun, The Phoenix Project: Shifting From Oil to Hydrogen
with Wartime Speed, prepared for the Renewable Hydrogen Roundtable,
World Resources Institute, Washington, DC, 10-11 April 2003, pp.
3-4.
21. Ibid.
22. Fossil fuel subsidies from Bjorn Larsen, World Fossil Fuel Subsidies
and Global Carbon Emissions in a Model with Interfuel Substitution,
Policy Research Working Paper 1256 (Washington, DC: World Bank,
1994), p. 7; companies involved in wind from Birgitte Dyrekilde,
"Big Players to Spark Wind Power Consolidation," Reuters, 18 March
2002; David Stipp, "The Coming Hydrogen Economy," Fortune, 12 November
2001; "BP to Spend $15 Billion in the Gulf of Mexico," PR Newswire,
1 August 2002; wind costs from Milborrow, op. cit. note 17.
23. Germany in Millais, op. cit. note 5.
24. Jim Dehlsen, Clipper Wind, discussion with author, 30 May 2001.
25. Cape Wind, "Cape Wind Selects GE Wind Energy," press release
(Yarmouth Port, MA: 21 January 2003); Winergy, Wind Farm Status
Reports, at www.winergyllc.com, viewed 9 May 2003.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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