Wind Power – Not Hot Air
January 27, 2010
America’s commitment to wind power isn’t all hot air.
Roughly 10,000 megawatts of new wind-power generation capacity was built in the United States in 2009 – enough to provide electricity to nearly 2.5 million homes. That new capacity alone is adequate to power all of the homes in Colorado and Wyoming combined.
All together, wind-power capacity now stands at about 35,000 megawatts, according to a report from the trade group American Wind Energy Association. That’s only about 2 percent of the nation’s electric-generation capacity, but since 2003, the annual growth rate has been nearly 40 percent.
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Our home state of Texas accounts for more than a quarter of the national wind-power capacity – wind farms, most of them in the western part of the state, provide 6 percent of the state’s electricity. Iowa and California are also big producers.
About 85,000 people are employed in the U.S. wind-power industry, with jobs including manufacturing, installation and maintenance. Not only is wind an energy story, it’s also a major infrastructure story.
The U.S. is the world’s leading wind power generator, but it’s also a growing energy component in China, where air pollution from coal-fired plants is a major health issue and potential threat to future economic growth.
A recent story in The New Yorker magazine points out that wind-generated electricity in China has
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Re: Wind Power – Not Hot Air
Not alot. He wants to create 1 million jobs - 1 million green jobs. I would guess that maybe 10% would be in wind.
Solar and nuclear energy are the big ones. Nuclear energy has been heating up beyond compare in recent weeks.
V
Re: Wind Power – Not Hot Air
Is Obama driving Wind Energy . I know he is behind Green Energy and renewables.. what % is directed at wind..anyone know.
Re: Wind Power – Not Hot Air
Check out HAI - good wind ETF - check out this interview.
http://www.istockanalyst.com/article/viewarticle/articleid/2320250