The U.S. wind energy industry celebrated the 10th
annual Global Wind Day on June 14, 2016by highlighting a 66 percent drop in
the cost of wind-generated electricity in just six years.
“From the corn fields of Iowa to the windswept plains of Texas, by
improving our technology and lowering wind power’s costs we’re saving
you money,” said Tom Kiernan, CEO of the American Wind Energy
Association (AWEA). “With costs 66 percent cheaper than they were six
years ago, wind power is on sale in the U.S. It’s a credit to American
ingenuity and manufacturing. We’re celebrating Global Wind Day by
sharing this good news far and wide.”
AWEA released its first in a new series of “Wind 101” short videos to mark the occasion. The two-minute “Wind 101: Cost and Reliability”
educates viewers about wind power’s decline in cost and how it helps
keep the lights on by reliably supplying a growing amount of electricity
for homes and businesses. The video can be seen here: http://bit.ly/2383QGv.
Falling costs are just one reason to celebrate Global Wind Day;
American wind power also reported rapid growth and record job figures at
the end of 2015. “Wind turbine technician is the fastest growing profession in the U.S.,
and has helped raise the U.S. industry’s job total to 88,000
well-paying positions, said John Kostyack, Executive Director of the
Wind Energy Foundation. “This record-level job growth coincides with the
U.S. wind energy industry installing more new generating electric
generating than any other source last year.”
These clean energy benefits are good news for the growing majority – 70 percent of likely voters, according to a new Lazard poll – who
believe it is “most important” for America to transition to a cleaner,
more energy-efficient economy, up from 57 percent in the last election
cycle.
Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) Secretary General Steve Sawyer also credited wind power’s costs decline
as one of the key factors for its rapid growth worldwide. GWEC
celebrated Global Wind Day by reflecting on a 5 percent increase in
employment by the global wind energy sector, with wind power now
employing over one million jobs around the world. “We are getting bigger, better and cheaper. The wind industry has
witnessed record growth in recent years, which not only helps the world
to meet the climate goals agreed in Paris but also generates much needed
new jobs and boosts local economies, to the tune of about $110 billion
dollars last year,” said Sawyer.
[Advances] in wind turbine technology and a U.S. wind manufacturing
sector that’s grown to over 500 facilities in 43 states have made costs
cuts possible. As the U.S. increasingly generates more of its electricity from renewable energy, electricity rates across the U.S. have remained 5.5 percent lower than they were in 2009. According to the Department of Energy’s 2015 Wind Vision report,
growing wind energy to 35 percent of the U.S. electricity supply by
2050 will save consumers $14 billion a year with cumulative savings on
their electric bills of $149 billion.
U.S. wind farms reduced electric power sector carbon dioxide
emissions by an estimated 132 million metric tons in 2015. Those
avoided emissions are equal to that from 28 million cars, or more than
six percent of all carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from U.S. electricity generation last year.
Wind energy also greatly reduces a variety of health-harming air pollutants, including smog-causing sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), which helps reduce rates of asthma and other respiratory issues. Electricity generated by wind in 2015 displaced an estimated 176,000 metric tons of SO2 and 106,000 metric tons of NOx, representing $7.3 billion in avoided health costs last year alone.
Global Wind Day, designated for June 15 every year, recognizes wind
power and its potential to change the world with clean, inexhaustible,
affordable energy.
American Wind Energy Association www.awea.org
Press Release dated June 14, 2016
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