The Department of Energy released its annual Wind Technologies Market Report last week, and the headline is roughly the same as years past: wind is great…and getting greater, but it needs more federal subsidies.
In fact, the Department of Energy and the wind industry have all but acknowledged the long-term un-competitiveness of wind.
The DOE’s report announced that the U.S. is second in the world for total wind capacity at 66 gigawatts, with 4,800 megawatts installed in 2014. Efficiency (“capacity factor”) increased from 30 percent in 2000 to 33 percent in 2014. On top of reduced costs, the DOE notes that 2014 saw the lowest prices for wind energy in the US ever.
Yet for all this improvement and apparent success, Department of Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz concluded from the report that “through continued investments and the help of stable policies, we’re confident that wind power will keep playing a major role in creating jobs and shaping America’s clean energy future.”
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