LBL 2009WindPowerreport
LBL 2009WindPowerreport
Renewable Energy
2009 WIND
TECHNOLOGIES
MARKET REPORT
AUGUST 2010
2009 Wind Technologies Market Report
Primary authors
Ryan Wiser, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Mark Bolinger, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... i
List of Acronyms ........................................................................................................................... ii
Executive Summary .................................................................................................................... iii
1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 1
2. Installation Trends ................................................................................................................... 3
3. Industry Trends ...................................................................................................................... 17
4. Price, Cost, and Performance Trends ................................................................................ 36
5. Policy and Market Drivers .................................................................................................... 57
6. Future Outlook ........................................................................................................................ 68
Appendix: Sources of Data Presented in this Report .......................................................... 71
References .................................................................................................................................. 74
Acknowledgments
For their support of this project, the authors thank Jacques Beaudry-Losique, Megan McCluer, Jim
Ahlgrimm, Michele Desautels, and Patrick Gilman of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Wind &
Water Power Program. For reviewing elements of this paper, we thank: Michael Goggin, Ron Stimmel,
Liz Salerno, Jessica Isaacs, and Kathy Belyeu (AWEA); Brendan Kirby (consultant); Charlie Smith
(UWIG); Jason Gifford and Bob Grace (Sustainable Energy Advantage); Andrew David (U.S.
International Trade Commission); Jacques Beaudry-Losique, Liz Hartman, Jim Ahlgrimm, Brian
Naughton, Patrick Gilman, and Ron Harris (DOE); Roger Hill (Sandia National Laboratory); Bob
Thresher and Maureen Hand (NREL); James Browning (BCS, Inc.); Chris Namovicz (Energy
Information Administration); Jennifer States (PNNL); Adam Hanna and Ric O’Connell (Black &
Veatch); Jim Walker (enXco); Doug Larson (Western Governors’ Association); Ed DeMeo (Renewable
Energy Consulting Services, Inc.); Mike O’Sullivan (NextEra Energy Resources); Steve Clemmer and
Alan Nogee (Union of Concerned Scientists). Special thanks to the American Wind Energy Association
(Kathy Belyeu and Elizabeth Salerno) for the use of their database of wind power projects, and for
providing other data as discussed in the Appendix. We also thank Andrew David (U.S. International
Trade Commission), Frank Oteri (NREL), and Billy Roberts (NREL) for their contributions to the wind
equipment manufacturing sections; Walt Musial (NREL) as well as Bonnie Ram and Wendy Wallace
(Energetics) for their assistance with the offshore wind energy discussion; Donna Heimiller (NREL) for
the wind power project map; and Michelle Kubik and Kathleen O’Dell (NREL) for assistance with layout,
formatting, and production. Berkeley Lab’s contributions to this report were funded by the Wind &
Water Power Program, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy of the U.S. Department of
Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. The authors are solely responsible for any omissions
or errors contained herein.
• Wind Power Additions in 2009 Shattered Old Records, with roughly 10 GW of New
Capacity Added in the United States and $21 Billion Invested. The pace of utility-scale
wind power capacity additions in 2009 was 20% higher than the previous U.S. record set in
2008, while cumulative wind power capacity grew by 40%. This was achieved despite the
financial crisis that roiled the wind power industry in 2009, and the significant reductions in
wholesale electricity prices that began in mid- to late-2008 and have continued to the present.
A variety of market drivers allowed year-on-year installation growth to persist in 2009,
including: carryover of projects initially planned for completion in 2008; elements of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act), including the Section
1603 Treasury Grant Program; the expiration of bonus depreciation rules at the end of 2009;
and state renewables portfolio standards.
• Wind Power Contributed 39% of All New U.S. Electric Generating Capacity in 2009.
This is down from 44% in 2008, but exceeds wind power’s contribution of 35% in 2007,
18% in 2006, 12% in 2005, and less than 4% from 2000 through 2004. For the fifth
consecutive year, wind power was the second-largest new resource added to the U.S.
electrical grid in terms of nameplate capacity, behind natural gas plants, but ahead of new
coal power.
• The United States Continued to Lead the World in Cumulative Wind Power Capacity,
but Was Overtaken by China in Annual Additions. After four years of leading the world
in annual wind power capacity additions, the United States dropped to second place in 2009,
capturing roughly 26% of the worldwide market (behind China’s 36% market share). At the
end of 2009, cumulative wind power capacity in the United States stood at more than 35,000
MW, ahead of China’s 25,853 MW and Germany’s 25,813 MW. Several countries are
beginning to achieve relatively high levels of wind energy penetration in their electricity
grids: end-of-2009 wind power capacity is projected to supply the equivalent of roughly 20%
of Denmark’s electricity demand, 14% of Spain’s and Portugal’s, 11% of Ireland’s, and 8%
of Germany’s. In the United States, the cumulative wind power capacity installed at the end
of 2009 would, in an average year, be able to supply roughly 2.5% of the nation’s electricity
consumption.
• Texas Achieved Higher Annual Capacity Additions than Other States, While Four
States Have Surpassed 10% Wind Energy Penetration. With 2,292 MW installed in 2009
alone, Texas dominated the 28 other states in which new large-scale wind turbines were
installed in 2009 (the next highest were Indiana with 905 MW and Iowa with 879 MW). In
terms of estimated wind energy supply as a proportion of in-state electricity generation, the
front-runners include Iowa (19.7%), South Dakota (13.3%), North Dakota (11.9%), and
Minnesota (10.7%). Some utilities are seeing higher percentages of wind energy supply than
these state totals, with nine utilities estimated to have in excess of 10% wind energy on their
systems.
In conclusion, 2009 continued a string of record-breaking years for the U.S. wind power
industry. Looking ahead, expectations are for a slower year in 2010, due to a combination of the
financial crisis, lower wholesale electricity prices, and lower demand for renewable energy.
Wind power capacity additions in 2009 were buoyed, in part, by projects that were initially
slated to be completed in 2008 but that carried over into 2009 when the PTC was extended,
somewhat masking the underlying challenges facing the sector. With the extension of federal
incentives through 2012, there is less motivation to complete projects in 2010 (though many
projects will likely start construction in 2010 in order to be eligible for the 30% Treasury cash
grant). Industry analysts project a range from 5,500 MW to 8,000 MW of wind power capacity
likely to be installed in the United States in 2010, a drop of 20-45% compared to the nearly
10,000 MW installed in 2009. After a slower 2010, most predictions show market resurgence in
2011 and 2012, as the Recovery Act programs mature and as financing constraints ease. Beyond
2012, however, the picture is considerably less certain, due to the scheduled expiration of a
number of federal policies at the end of that year, including the PTC, the ability to elect a 30%
ITC in lieu of the PTC, and the ability to receive the 30% Treasury cash grant for projects that
initiated construction by the end of 2010.
The rapid pace of development and change within the industry has made it difficult to keep up
with trends in the marketplace, yet the need for timely, objective information on the industry and
its progress has never been greater. This report – the fourth in an ongoing annual series –
attempts to meet this need by providing a detailed overview of developments and trends in the
United States wind power market, with a particular focus on 2009.
As with previous editions, this report begins with an overview of key installation-related trends:
trends in wind power capacity growth, how that growth compares to other countries and
generation sources, the amount and percentage of wind energy in individual states and serving
specific utilities, and the quantity of proposed wind power capacity in various interconnection
queues in the United States. Next, the report covers an array of wind power industry trends,
including developments in turbine manufacturer market share, manufacturing and supply-chain
investments, wind turbine and wind power project size, project financing developments, and
trends among wind power developers, project owners, and power purchasers. The report then
turns to a discussion of wind project price, cost, and performance trends. In so doing, it reviews
the prices paid for wind power in the United States, and how those prices compare to short-term
wholesale electricity prices. It also describes trends in installed wind power project costs, wind
turbine transaction prices, project performance, and operations and maintenance expenses. Next,
the report examines other policy and market factors impacting the domestic wind power market,
including federal and state policy drivers, transmission issues, and grid integration. Finally, the
report concludes with a preview of possible near-term market developments.
This fourth edition updates data presented in the previous editions, while highlighting key trends
and important new developments from 2009. New to this edition is a discussion of trends in the
hub height and rotor diameter of wind turbines installed in the United States, new data on wind
turbine and component imports into and exports from the United States, an expanded discussion
of offshore wind energy development, and data on wind power curtailment. The importance of
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (the Recovery Act) to wind energy in 2009
is reflected throughout the report. The report concentrates on larger-scale wind turbines, defined
here as individual turbines or projects that exceed 100 kW in size. 1 The U.S. wind power sector
is multifaceted, however, and also includes smaller, customer-sited wind turbines used to power
residences, farms, and businesses. Data on these latter applications are not the focus of this
report, though a brief discussion on Small Wind Turbines is provided on page 4.
1
The 100 kW cut-off between ‘small’ and ‘large’ wind turbines is, in part, justified by the fact that the U.S. tax code
makes a similar distinction. AWEA (2010a) sometimes uses this distinction as well, but in other instances defines
large wind turbines as including turbines above and equal to 100 kW.
2
For example, large wind turbines are defined in this report as exceeding 100 kW, and by AWEA (2010a) as equal
to and exceeding 100 kW. In reporting annual and cumulative capacity additions, this report focuses on large
turbines, whereas AWEA (2010a) sometimes also includes small wind turbines. Other methodological differences
between AWEA (2010a) and this report are noted as appropriate in the pages that follow.
The U.S. wind power market delivered another record-shattering year in 2009, with 9,994 MW
of new capacity added, bringing the cumulative total to more than 35,000 MW (Figure 1). 3 This
growth translates into nearly $21 billion (real 2009 dollars) invested in wind power project
installation in 2009, for a cumulative investment total of $66 billion since the beginning of the
1980s. 4
12 36
8 24
6 18
4 12
2 6
0 0
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Source: AWEA project database
Wind power installations in 2009 were not only the largest on record in the United States, but
were 20% higher than the previous U.S. record, set in 2008. Cumulative wind power capacity
grew by 40% in 2009. This was achieved despite the financial crisis that roiled the wind power
industry in 2009, and the significant reductions in wholesale electricity prices that began in mid-
to late-2008 and have continued to the present. A variety of market drivers allowed year-on-year
installation growth to persist in 2009: carryover of projects initially planned for completion in
2008 (but, when the production tax credit was extended through 2012, ultimately came online in
3
When reporting annual wind power capacity additions, this report focuses on gross capacity additions of large
wind turbines. The net increase in capacity each year can be somewhat lower, reflecting turbine decommissioning.
Some of the methodological differences between the figures presented here and by AWEA (2010a) are summarized
in footnote 2. These difference lead AWEA (2010a) to report 10,010 MW of wind power capacity additions in 2009
(including large and small wind turbines), for a cumulative total of 35,086 MW
4
These investment figures are based on an extrapolation of the average project-level capital costs reported later in
this report, and do not include investments in manufacturing facilities, research & development expenditures, or
O&M costs.
The yearly boom-and-bust cycle that characterized the U.S. wind power market from 1999
through 2004 – caused by periodic, short-term extensions of the federal production tax credit
(PTC) – has now been replaced by five consecutive years of growth. With federal tax incentives
for wind energy now extended through 2012, significant capacity additions and a semblance of
near-term market stability might be expected. On the other hand, the global financial crisis,
lower wholesale electricity prices, and lower demand for renewable energy have created
expectations for a slower pace of wind power development in 2010. Moreover, wind power
capacity additions in 2009 were buoyed, in part, by projects that were initially slated to be
completed in 2008 but that carried over into 2009 when the PTC was extended, somewhat
masking the underlying challenges facing the sector. With the extension of federal incentives
through 2012, there is less motivation to complete projects in 2010.
Small wind turbines can provide power directly to homes, farms, schools, businesses, and industrial facilities,
offsetting the need to purchase some portion of the host’s electricity from the grid; such wind turbines can also
provide power to off-grid sites. Wind turbines used in these applications are often much smaller – generally
ranging in size from a few hundred watts to up to 100 kW or more – than the larger-scale turbines that are the
primary focus of this report.
The table below summarizes sales of small wind turbines 100 kW and less in size into the U.S. market. As
shown, more than 20 MW of small wind turbines were sold in the U.S. in 2009; most of this new capacity came
from turbines manufactured by U.S. companies. These installation figures represent a 15% growth in annual
sales – in capacity terms – relative to 2008, yielding a cumulative installed capacity of small wind turbines in the
United States in this turbine size range of roughly 100 MW. Within this market segment, there has been a trend
towards larger, grid-tied systems (AWEA 2010b).
Growth in this sector has been driven – at least in part – by a variety of state incentive programs. In addition,
wind turbines equal to or under 100 kW in size are now eligible for an uncapped 30% investment tax credit (the
30% tax credit, with a dollar cap, was initially enacted in October 2008; the cap was removed in the Recovery
Act of February 2009).
Wind power now represents one of the largest new sources of electric capacity additions in the
United States. For the fifth consecutive year, wind power was the second-largest new resource
added to the U.S. electrical grid in terms of aggregate capacity, behind the 11,500 MW of new
natural gas plants added in 2009, but ahead of the 3,200 MW of new coal. New wind power
projects contributed roughly 39% of the new nameplate capacity added to the U.S. electrical grid
in 2009, compared to 44% in 2008, 35% in 2007, 18% in 2006, 12% in 2005, and less than 4%
from 2000 through 2004 (see Figure 2). 5
80
Total Annual Capacity Additions (GW)
42%
42%wind
wind
1% wind Other non-Renewable
70
Coal
60 3% wind Gas (non-CCGT)
Gas (CCGT)
50 4% wind
Other Renewable
40 Wind
0% wind
30 2% wind 39% wind
12% wind 44% wind
20 42% wind
wind 35% wind
42%wind
18%
10
0
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Source: EIA, Ventyx, AWEA, IREC, Berkeley Lab
EIA’s (2010) reference-case forecast projects that total U.S. electricity supply will need to
increase at an average pace of roughly 49 TWh per year from 2010 to 2035 in order to meet
demand growth. On an energy basis, the annual amount of electricity expected to be generated
by the new wind power capacity added in 2009 represents nearly 60% of this average annual
projected growth in supply. 6 By extension, if wind power additions continued through 2035 at
the same pace as set in 2009, then nearly 60% of the nation’s projected increase in electricity
generation from 2010 through 2035 would be met with wind electricity. Although future growth
trends are hard to predict, it is clear that a significant portion of the country’s new generation
needs is already being met by wind.
5
The same trend is apparent in Europe. In 2009, for example, more wind power was installed in the EU than any
other generating technology, with 39% of all capacity additions coming from wind power (EWEA 2010). From
2000 through 2009, 33% of capacity additions in the EU came from wind power, second only to natural gas.
6
Given the relatively low capacity factor of wind power, one might initially expect that percentage contribution of
wind power on an energy basis would be much lower than on a capacity basis. This is not necessarily the case, as
documented by a review of capacity and electricity production data from EIA, in part because even though
combined-cycle gas plants can be operated as baseload facilities with high capacity factors, those facilities are often
run as intermediate plants with capacity factors that are not dissimilar from that of wind power. Combustion turbine
gas facilities run at even lower capacity factors.
On a worldwide basis, more than 38,000 MW of wind power capacity was added in 2009, the
highest volume achieved in a single year, and up from about 28,000 MW in 2008, bringing the
cumulative total to approximately 160,000 MW (Table 1). In terms of cumulative installed wind
power capacity, the United States ended the year with 22% of total worldwide capacity, and is
the leading market in the world by this metric (Table 1 and Figure 3). Over the past 10 years,
cumulative wind power capacity has grown an average of 30% per year in the United States,
slightly higher than the 28% growth rate in worldwide capacity.
After four years of leading the world in annual wind power capacity additions, the U.S. dropped
to second place in 2009 (Table 1), capturing roughly 26% of the worldwide market (behind
China’s 36% market share 7), down from 29% in 2008 and 27% in 2007 (Figure 3). Spain,
Germany, and India rounded out the top five countries in 2009 for annual capacity additions. 8
7
Wind power additions in China are from BTM (2010), and include a considerable amount of capacity that was
installed but that had not yet received transmission interconnection by the end of 2009. All of the U.S. capacity
reported here, on the other hand, was capable of electricity delivery. In fact, if only considering the new wind power
capacity that achieved transmission interconnection and was therefore capable of delivering electricity to the grid by
the end of 2009, the United States would have again led the world in annual capacity additions in 2009.
8
Yearly and cumulative installed wind power capacity in the United States are from AWEA, while global wind
power capacity in 2009 comes from BTM (2010), but updated with the most recent AWEA data for the United
States. Global wind power capacity in earlier years comes from the Earth Policy Institute. Some disagreement
exists among these data sources and others, e.g., Windpower Monthly and the Global Wind Energy Council.
60% 120
50% 100
40% 80
30% 60
20% 40
10% 20
0% 0
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Source: Earth Policy Institute, BTM Consult, AWEA project database
Figure 3. The Contribution of U.S. Wind Power Capacity to Global Wind Power Capacity
Several countries are beginning to achieve relatively high levels of wind energy penetration in
their electricity grids. Figure 4 presents data on end-of-2009 (and end-of-2006/07/08) installed
wind power capacity, translated into projected annual electricity supply based on assumed
country-specific capacity factors, and divided by projected 2010 (and 2007/08/09) electricity
consumption. Using this approximation for the contribution of wind power to electricity
consumption, and focusing only on the 20 countries with the greatest cumulative installed wind
power capacity, end-of-2009 installed wind power is projected to supply the equivalent of
roughly 20% of Denmark’s electricity demand, 14% of Portugal’s, 14% of Spain’s, 11% of
Ireland’s, and 8% of Germany’s. In the United States, the cumulative wind power capacity
installed at the end of 2009 would, in an average year, be able to supply roughly 2.5% of the
nation’s electricity consumption (up from 1.8% at the end of 2008, 1.2% at the end of 2007, and
0.8% at the end of 2006). 9 On a global basis, wind energy’s contribution at the end of 2009 is
estimated to be 1.8%.
9
In terms of actual 2009 deliveries, wind energy represented 1.8% of net electricity generation and 2.0% of national
electricity consumption in the United States. These figures are below the 2.5% figure provided above because 2.5%
is a projection based on end-of-year 2009 wind power capacity.
16%
Approximate Wind Penetration, end of 2006
14%
12%
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
0%
India
France
Canada
Australia
Netherlands
TOTAL
Ireland
Japan
Spain
Greece
Denmark
Austria
UK
Portugal
Brazil
Germany
Turkey
Italy
U.S.
Sweden
China
Source: Berkeley Lab estimates based on data from BTM Consult and elsewhere
Figure 4. Approximate Wind Energy Penetration in the Twenty Countries with the
Greatest Installed Wind Power Capacity
Texas Achieved Higher Annual Capacity Additions than Other States, While
Four States Have Surpassed 10% Wind Energy Penetration
New large-scale 10 wind turbines were installed in 29 states in 2009. Texas again dominated in
terms of new wind power capacity, with 2,292 MW installed in 2009 alone, down somewhat
from 2,671 MW installed in 2008. As shown in Figure 5 and Table 2, other leading states in
terms of new capacity (each with more than 500 MW) include Indiana, Iowa, Oregon, Illinois,
New York, and Washington. Thirteen states added more than 200 MW each in 2009.
On a cumulative basis, Texas continued to build on its lead in 2009, with a total of 9,410 MW of
wind power capacity installed by the end of the year. In fact, Texas has more installed wind
power capacity than all but five countries worldwide. U.S. states following Texas in cumulative
installed capacity are Iowa, California, Washington, and Oregon. Sixteen states had more than
500 MW of wind power capacity as of the end of 2009, with fourteen topping 1,000 MW, and
three topping 2,000 MW. Although all wind power projects in the United States to date have
been installed on land, offshore development activities continued in 2009, as discussed in the
next section.
10
“Large-scale” turbines are defined consistently with the rest of this report – i.e., turbines over 100 kW.
Some states are beginning to realize relatively high levels of wind energy penetration. Table 2
lists the top 20 states based on an estimate of wind electricity generation from end-of-2009 wind
power capacity, divided by total in-state electricity generation in 2009. 11 By this metric, four
Great Plains states lead the list in terms of estimated wind energy as a percentage of total in-state
generation. Specifically, the wind power capacity installed as of the end of 2009 is estimated, in
an average year, to be capable of generating approximately 19.7% of all in-state electricity
11
Wind energy penetration can either be expressed as a percentage of in-state load or in-state generation. In-state
generation is used here, primarily because wind energy is often sold across state lines, which tends to distort
penetration levels expressed as a percentage of in-state load. To estimate these figures, end-of-2009 wind power
capacity is translated into estimated annual wind electricity production based on estimated state-specific capacity
factors that derive from the project performance data reported later in this report. The resulting state-specific wind
electricity production estimates are then divided by the latest data on total in-state electricity generation available
from the EIA (i.e., 2009). The resulting wind energy penetration estimates shown in Table 2 differ from what
AWEA provides in its U.S. Wind Industry Annual Market Report (AWEA 2010a). The most significant source of
these differences is that AWEA uses preliminary data on actual 2009 wind electricity generation from EIA, while
this report estimates annual wind electricity generation based on the amount of wind power capacity installed at the
end of 2009.
Some utilities are achieving even higher levels of wind energy penetration into their individual
electric systems. Table 3 lists the top-20 utilities in terms of aggregate wind power capacity on
their systems at the end of 2009, based on data provided by AWEA (2010a). Included here are
wind power projects either owned by or under long-term contract with these utilities for use by
their own customers; short-term renewable electricity and renewable energy certificate purchases
are excluded. The table also lists the top-20 utilities based on an estimate of the percentage of
retail sales that wind electricity represents, using end-of-2009 wind power capacity, wind power
capacity factors that are consistent with the state or region in which a utility operates, and EIA-
provided aggregate retail electricity sales for each utility in 2008. 12 As shown, Minnkota Power
12
In calculating these figures, several issues deserve mention. First, the utility-specific capacity data that AWEA
released in its U.S. Wind Industry Annual Market Report (AWEA 2010a) are used, with two exceptions: (1) the
Empire District Electric Company, with 255 MW of wind power under contract at the end of 2009, was added to
AWEA’s “top twenty” investor-owned utility list at position number 14 (and ranks 19th in our combined list of all
utility types); and (2) Minnkota Power Cooperative’s wind power capacity was corrected to 357 MW (AWEA
(2010a) shows 290 MW). Second, only utilities with more than 100 MW of wind power capacity are included in the
calculation of wind energy as a proportion of retail sales. Third, projected wind generation based on each utility’s
installed wind power capacity at the end of 2009 is divided by the aggregate national retail sales of that utility in
2008 (which is the latest full year of utility-specific retail sales data provided by EIA). Fourth, in the case of
generation and transmission (G&T) cooperatives and power authorities that provide power to other cooperatives and
municipal utilities (but do not directly serve retail load themselves), 2008 retail sales from the electric utilities
served by those G&T organizations and power authorities are used. In some cases, these individual utilities may be
buying additional wind power directly from other projects, or may be served by other G&T cooperatives or power
authorities that supply wind. In these cases, the penetration percentages shown here may be somewhat misleading.
As an example, the “MSR Public Power Agency” (MSR) is a joint powers agency created to procure power for
municipal utilities in the California cities of Modesto, Santa Clara, and Redding. The 8.4% penetration rate shown
in the second column of Table 3 represents MSR’s power purchase agreement with the 200 MW Big Horn wind
power project in Washington state. Two of the three municipal utilities participating in MSR, however, purchase
additional wind energy from other wind power projects. The result is that if one were to look at these three
municipal utilities individually rather than as a group through MSR, their penetration rates would be considerably
higher than the 8.4% shown in Table 3.
Offshore wind power projects totaling 689 MW were installed globally in 2009, bringing
worldwide offshore capacity to 2,110 MW (BTM 2010). The vast majority of this capacity is
located in Europe. In contrast, all wind power projects built in the United States to date have
been sited on land. The availability of low-cost land-based wind energy, regulatory delays and
uncertainty associated with offshore development, turbine supply shortages, high and uncertain
offshore project costs, and public acceptance concerns have so far hampered progress in the
offshore sector in the United States. Nonetheless, there is interest in offshore wind energy in
several parts of the country, driven by the proximity of offshore wind resources to large
population centers, advances in technology, potential local economic development benefits, and
superior capacity factors (and, in some instances, peak load coincidence) compared to the finite
set of attractive and developable land-based wind power projects available in some regions.
Figure 6 shows 13 proposed offshore wind power projects in the United States that have
advanced significantly in the permitting and development process. These projects have either
made substantial progress towards receiving state approval or have received a lease or “interim
limited lease” from the U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS). 13 In total, these proposed
projects equal 2,476 MW, and are primarily located in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, though
notable proposed projects also exist in the Southeast, Great Lakes, and Gulf of Mexico. Even
these “advanced stage” projects are in various stages of development – some or even many may
never be realized, while other projects not identified in the figure are also under consideration.
Table 4. Proposed Power Purchase Agreements for Offshore Wind Power Projects
Seller Purchaser Location / Amount Contract Details
25-yr contract for electricity and a portion
Delaware (28.6%) of the RECs: $132/MWh in 2013,
NRG Bluewater Delmarva
200 MW* escalating at 2.5%/yr; approved by
regulatory commission in July 2008
20-yr contract for electricity and RECs:
Deepwater Rhode Island $244/MWh in 2013, escalating at 3.5%/yr;
National Grid
Wind 28.8 MW filed with regulatory commission in June
2010
15-yr contract for electricity and RECs:
Massachusetts $187/MWh in 2013, escalating at 3.5%/yr;
Cape Wind National Grid
50% of 468 MW** filed with regulatory commission in May
2010 with revisions in July 2010
Source: Berkeley Lab review of regulatory filings
* NRG Bluewater has contracted for an additional ~93 MW from their 450 MW proposed Delaware facility under a memorandum of
understanding with the Delaware Electric Municipal Corporation and a contract with the University of Maryland.
** National Grid is also seeking approval of a second nearly-identical but conditional PPA for the remaining 50% that is intended to
be available for assignment to other parties in the future and is intended to facilitate project financing.
Several other project-level announcements in 2009 and early 2010 demonstrate the accelerating
pace of offshore wind power development in the United States. Most notably, after nine years in
the permitting process, the 468 MW Cape Wind project was granted approval by MMS in April
2010, following the 2009 completion of MMS’s Final Environmental Impact Statement as well
as the state and local permitting process. Cape Wind also selected a turbine supplier in 2010
(Siemens 3.6 MW turbines), received FAA approval, and filed a PPA for consideration before
the state’s utility regulatory commission.14
In Delaware, NRG Bluewater Wind was awarded an interim limited lease by MMS in 2009, and
a contract with the University of Maryland was announced for an additional 55 MW of the
project’s output (i.e., in addition to the 200 MW contract with Delmarva shown in Table 4). In
New Jersey, NRG Bluewater Wind, Garden State Offshore Energy, and Fisherman’s Energy
were all awarded interim limited leases by MMS in 2009, and each is benefiting from a state
funding cost share for meteorological testing. Garden State Offshore Energy, a joint venture
between Public Service Enterprise Group and Deepwater Wind, was selected by the New Jersey
Board of Public Utilities in 2008 to receive a $4 million grant from the state in support of a 350
MW offshore project, with additional agreements with NRG Bluewater Wind and Fisherman’s
Energy following. In Rhode Island, the PPA for the 28.8 MW Block Island demonstration
project was initially rejected by the state’s public utilities commission in March 2010, but
subsequent state legislation has led to contract modifications and re-submittal to the commission
in June 2010 for further consideration; in early 2009, Rhode Island signed a joint development
14
Also in Massachusetts, the Town of Hull is considering shelving a small, planned offshore project due to cost
concerns.
In addition to these project-level developments, policy and regulatory activity related to offshore
wind energy deployment continued. Following the early 2009 announcement of MMS’s rules
governing offshore wind power development leases, easements, and royalties, the federal
government has moved towards implementation. The creation of a new regional MMS office to
coordinate and appropriately expedite renewable energy development on the Atlantic Outer
Continental Shelf was announced in 2010, for example, as was the creation of the Atlantic
Offshore Wind Energy Consortium, through which the Department of the Interior and East Coast
states will facilitate federal-state cooperation on offshore wind power development on the Outer
Continental Shelf. Earlier in 2009, MMS and FERC came to agreement on their respective roles
in offshore energy development. MMS subsequently began to issue limited leases for five years
of resource testing under an interim policy. Then, in April 2010, MMS released a Request for
Information (RFI) for commercial leasing for wind power on the outer continental shelf off of
Delaware. The RFI invites interested parties to submit descriptions of their interest in obtaining
a commercial lease in specific areas off the coast of Delaware. The RFI details information that
developers should submit and all parties are invited to submit information on environmental
issues of concern. MMS (now called the Bureau of Ocean Energy) is required to issue leases
competitively, and the RFI is the first step in determining if there is competitive interest in wind
energy off the Delaware coast.
At the state level, the final Massachusetts Ocean Management Plan was released in December
2009, which (among other provisions) encourages community-scale offshore wind power
development, creates a formal role for regional planning authorities in offshore energy planning,
and identifies two larger designated offshore wind energy areas in state waters. In Maine,
legislation was passed in 2010 establishing a goal for at least 300 MW of offshore wind energy
by 2020 and 5,000 MW by 2030, and implementing other regulatory changes intended to
facilitate offshore wind power development in the state; Maine also received Recovery Act funds
from DOE to support offshore wind energy research, testing, and demonstration projects.
Finally, in late 2009, three Mid-Atlantic states (Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia) signed an
agreement to work together collaboratively on regional offshore wind power development.
One visible testament to the increased interest in wind energy is the amount of wind power
capacity currently working its way through the major transmission interconnection queues across
the country. Figure 7 provides this information for wind power and other resources aggregated
across 33 different interconnection queues administered by independent system operators (ISOs),
regional transmission organizations (RTOs), and utilities. 15 These data should be interpreted
with caution: though placing a project in the interconnection queue is a necessary step in project
development, being in the queue does not guarantee that a project will actually get built. In fact,
there is a growing recognition that many of the projects currently in interconnection queues are
very early in the development process. As a result, efforts have been and are being taken by the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), ISOs, RTOs, and utilities to reduce the number
of speculative projects that have – in recent years – clogged these queues (Porter et al. 2009).
350
250
200
150
100
50
0
Wind Natural Gas Coal Nuclear Solar Other
Source: Exeter Associates review of interconnection queues
Even with this important caveat, the amount of capacity in the nation’s interconnection queues
still provides at least some indication of the amount of wind power development that is in the
planning phase. At the end of 2009, even after reforms by a number of ISOs, RTOs, and utilities
to reduce the number of projects in their queues, there were roughly 300 GW of wind power
capacity within the interconnection queues reviewed for this report – nearly nine times the
15
The queues surveyed include PJM Interconnection, Midwest Independent System Operator (MISO), New York
ISO, ISO-New England, California ISO, Electricity Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), Southwest Power Pool
(SPP), Western Area Power Administration (WAPA), Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Tennessee Valley
Authority (TVA), and 23 other individual utilities. To provide a sense of sample size and coverage, the ISOs,
RTOs, and utilities whose queues are included here have an aggregated peak demand of almost 70% of the U.S.
total. Figures 7 and 8 only include projects that were active in the queue at the end of 2009 but that had not yet been
built; suspended projects are not included.
Much of this wind power capacity is planned for the Midwest, Mountain, Texas, PJM, SPP, and
Northwest regions: wind power projects in the interconnection queues in these regions account
for 93% of the aggregate 303 GW of wind power in the selected queues (see Figure 8). At the
other end of the spectrum, smaller amounts of wind power capacity are represented in the
interconnection queues of the California ISO (3.4%), New York ISO (2.3%), ISO-New England
(1.2%), and the Southeast (0.1%).
90
Nameplate Wind Power Capacity (GW)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
MISO / Mountain ERCOT PJM SPP Northwest California New York ISO-New Southeast
Midwest ISO ISO England
Source: Exeter Associates review of interconnection queues
As another data point, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) finds that
roughly 210 GW of new wind power capacity is planned for construction over the next ten years
in the United States (NERC 2009a). Once again, though, it is unlikely that all of these planned
projects will ultimately come to fruition within this time frame. As a measure of the near-term
development pipeline, Ventyx (2010) estimates that – as of late-July 2010 – more than 31 GW of
wind power capacity was either under construction or in site preparation (5 GW of the 31 GW
total), in-development and permitted (12 GW of the 31 GW), or in-development with pending
permit and/or regulatory applications (the remaining 14 GW of the 31 GW total). AWEA
(2010c), meanwhile, identified 5,700 MW of wind power projects that were under construction
as of mid-2010.
16
As a rough benchmark, 300 GW of wind power capacity is also the approximate amount of capacity required to
reach 20% wind energy penetration in the United States, as estimated in DOE (2008).
General Electric (GE) remained the number one manufacturer of wind turbines supplying the
U.S. market in 2009, with 40% of domestic turbine installations (down slightly from 43% in
2008, 45% in 2007, and 47% in 2006). 17 Following GE were Vestas (15%), Siemens (12%),
Mitsubishi (8%), Suzlon (7%), Clipper (6%), Gamesa (6%), REpower (3%), Acciona (2%), and
Nordex (1%). Other utility-scale (>100 kW) wind turbines installed in the United States in 2009
(and that fall into the “Other” category in Figure 9) include turbines from NedWind (6.5 MW),
AAER (6 MW), DeWind (6 MW), Fuhrlander (4.5 MW), Goldwind (4.5 MW), RRB (2.4 MW),
Elecon (0.6 MW), and Wind Energy Solutions (0.25 MW).
100% Other
90% Nordex
Turbine Manufacturer U.S. Market Share
80% Acciona
70% REpower
60% Gamesa
50% Clipper
40% Suzlon
Mitsubishi
30%
Siemens
20%
Vestas
10%
GE Wind
0%
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Source: AWEA project database
A notable increase in competition among wind turbine manufacturers has occurred since 2005,
with the number of manufacturers installing more than 1 MW increasing from just 6 in 2005 to
16 manufacturers in 2009. Consequently, the market share of the leading manufacturers – in
percentage terms – has generally declined. Manufacturers with modern wind turbines installed
in the United States now hail from not just the United States, Europe, and Japan, but also from
India and, for the first time in 2009, China. Chinese and South Korean manufacturers, in
particular, began to express strong interest in entering the U.S. market in 2009, though the timing
and speed of that entry remains uncertain.
17
Market share reported here is in MW terms, and is based on project installations in the year in question, not
turbine shipments or orders.
In 2009, U.S.-owned GE was the second-leading supplier of turbines globally, with a 12.4%
market share, slightly behind Vestas’ 12.5% market share. Clipper was the 13th largest
manufacturer, with 1.6% of the worldwide market (BTM 2010). 18 On a worldwide basis, perhaps
the most significant story of 2009 was the growing market share of Chinese turbine
manufactures; to date, that growth has been based almost entirely on sales to the Chinese market.
As wind power deployment has increased in the United States, a growing number of foreign and
domestic turbine and component manufacturers have begun or continued to localize and expand
operations across the nation.
Though the financial crisis resulted in a slowdown in overall U.S. manufacturing in 2009, wind
equipment manufacturing was, to a degree, a bright spot. Figure 10 presents a non-exhaustive list
of 13 wind turbine and component manufacturing and assembly facilities that opened in 2009,
and identifies their location. The map also depicts the location of 21 new manufacturing
18
In addition, U.S. manufacturers are major players in the global market for smaller-scale turbines (AWEA 2010b).
Figure 10. Location of Existing and New Turbine and Component Manufacturing
Facilities
Of the 34 new or announced facilities in 2009 captured in Figure 10, two are owned by major
international wind turbine original equipment manufacturers (OEMs): Siemens (nacelles in
Hutchinson, Kansas), and Mitsubishi Power Systems (nacelles in Fort Smith, Arkansas). In
addition, GE announced plans to open a research facility in Van Buren Township, Michigan.
(Research facilities are not included in the figure).
Several smaller- to mid-sized OEMs also opened or announced U.S. factories in 2009. Nordic
Windpower, for example, opened a turbine manufacturing and assembly facility in Pocatello,
Idaho, where it is producing and assembling its 1 MW turbines. Continental Wind announced
that it would open a turbine manufacturing facility in Santa Paula, California, where it will
reportedly focus on the production of turbines ranging from 300-900 kW. Still other firms,
including a number of major international turbine vendors, continued to make progress in
As a result of this activity, seven of the ten OEMs with the largest share of the U.S. market in
2009 (GE, Vestas, Siemens, Suzlon, Clipper, Gamesa, Acciona) have one or more manufacturing
facilities operating in the United States, and two of the remaining three (Mitsubishi, Nordex)
have announced specific plans to open facilities in the future. These figures compare to just one
utility-scale wind turbine OEM assembling nacelles in the United States in 2004 (GE). Still
other active domestic and foreign OEMs have already established manufacturing facilities in the
United States (Nordic, DeWind) or have at least tentatively announced the location of future U.S.
manufacturing facilities (Alstom, Emergya, Fuhrlander, A-Power, Ming Yang), 19 while several
U.S. companies have announced their interest in manufacturing but have not yet built any utility-
scale turbines (e.g., Northern Power Systems, Continental Wind).
Other notable developments from 2009 and early 2010 include the cash infusions garnered by
emerging domestic turbine OEMs, and the increased interest in the United States market by
Asian players. Clipper, for example, received a cash infusion through the sale of 49.5% of the
company to United Technologies Corporation, while Nordic Windpower also raised substantial
new capital. Meanwhile, in addition to Mitsubishi’s planned nacelle assembly facility, new
Asian OEMs from South Korea and China demonstrated interest in the U.S. market. South
Korea’s Samsung, Hyundai, and Unison, for example, all announced interest in U.S. sales of
wind turbines, while California-based Composite Technology Corporation sold its DeWind
manufacturing business to South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering. China’s
Goldwind installed its first wind turbines on United States soil in 2009, and a number of other
Chinese manufacturers have also announced their entry into the market; in early 2010, for
example, A-Power and Ming Yang announced the location of possible future manufacturing
facilities in Nevada and Texas, respectively.
Some of the states that have experienced the greatest growth in installed wind power capacity in
recent years are also seeing significant new manufacturing activity. Even states with little
installed wind power capacity, however, are reaping job and economic benefits from new wind-
related manufacturing facilities, particularly if those states are strategically positioned
geographically near the main wind power markets and in locations that minimize transportation
logistics challenges and costs (e.g., Arkansas).
19
Some of these announcements preceded 2009, or were in early 2010, and so are not included in Figure 10.
Notwithstanding the generally positive outlook for the turbine manufacturing sector in the United
States, however, the industry is facing economic headwinds. AWEA (2010a) estimates that
1,500 manufacturing jobs were lost in 2009 (reducing the number of wind turbine and
component manufacturing jobs in the United States to around 18,500 at year end, but still up
significantly from years past) as a number of firms delayed or scaled-back their expansion plans
and announced layoffs as a result of weak demand for wind turbines and the poor state of the
U.S. economy. With financial conditions showing signs of stabilizing, some manufacturers have
already begun the process of rehiring workers and resuming their expansion plans, but the
outlook for 2010 remains uncertain. In addition, as the domestic industry expands, a new
challenge has become more acute: workforce training and development for all segments of the
wind power industry. A variety of programs at the local and national levels are beginning to
target these needs.
These general trends are confirmed in this section by relying upon similar import data as used by
David (2010), specifically data from the U.S. Department of Commerce, 21 but with somewhat
different assumptions and data processing. This analysis supports the basic conclusion that the
United States remains a large importer of wind power equipment, but that wind power capacity
20
Despite the different approaches taken, AWEA (2010a), David (2010), and the analysis presented in this section
all focus on wind turbines and components and wind turbine costs. Excluded from all three analyses are
foundations, electrical collection and grid interconnection systems, roads, project development costs, and other non-
turbine balance-of-plant expenditures. Following the approach used by AWEA (2010a), and unlike David (2010),
our analysis emphasizes equipment imports as a fraction of wind turbine equipment-related costs alone.
21
The Department of Commerce trade data are accessed through the U.S. International Trade Commission’s
(USITC) DataWeb, which compiles statistics from the Department of Commerce on imports and exports. The
statistics can be queried online at: http://dataweb.usitc.gov/. The analysis presented here relies on the ‘customs
value’ of imports as opposed to the ‘landed value.’ For more information on these data and their application to wind
energy, see David (2009, 2010).
Figure 11 presents calendar-year data on U.S. imports and exports of wind-powered generating
sets from 2006 through 2009. 22 Wind-powered generating sets include nacelles and, when
imported with the nacelle, certain turbine components. (Data on the separate importation of
turbine components are additive to the data shown in Figure 11, are reported in Figure 12, and
are discussed later in this section).
As shown in Figure 11, U.S. imports of wind-powered generating sets grew from $1.3 billion in
2006 to nearly $2.5 billion in both 2007 and 2008, before falling to roughly $2.3 billion in 2009
(all data are presented in real 2009 dollars). At $2.3 billion, the United States was – by far – the
largest importer of wind-powered generating sets in 2009, representing approximately 34% of
worldwide imports (no other country reached 10% of global imports). 23 The primary source
markets from which these imports to the United States originate have been and continue to be the
home countries of the major international wind turbine manufacturers: Denmark, Spain, Japan,
India, and Germany.
3.0 US Imports
from: (2006-2009):
- 69% to Canada
Other
- 12% to China
2.5 Germany - 8% to Chile
India - 7% to Mexico
Spain
2.0 Japan
Billion US$ 2009
Denmark
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
2006 2007 2008 2009
Exports of wind-powered generating sets from the United States increased to $120 million in
2009, up from roughly $20 million in 2008. The largest destination markets for U.S. exports
over the entire 2006-2009 timeframe included Canada (69%), China (12%), Chile (8%), and
22
Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) 8502.31.0000 – “Wind-powered generating sets.” This HTS code includes
both utility-scale and small wind turbines. When components are imported separately from the nacelle, other tariff
provisions apply (see footnote 24).
23
Using similar HTS codes, data on global imports and exports come from the World Trade Atlas by Global Trade
Information Services, Inc.
The data presented in Figure 11 are for wind-powered generating sets. Wind turbine blades,
hubs, generators, gearboxes, and other components are included in Figure 11 only if shipped
with the nacelle itself. These same wind turbine components may also be imported separate
from the nacelle, however, implying that the data presented in Figure 11 include only a fraction
of total wind equipment imported into the United States. Data for the separate importation of
some wind turbine components are also available and can be added to the imports shown in
Figure 11, but data on the separate importation of turbine components are embedded within
larger trade categories that include sectors other than wind energy.
Figure 12 presents estimated calendar-year data for the separate importation of selected wind
turbine components that include towers (trade category is “towers and lattice masts”), generators
(“AC generators from 750 to 10,000 kVA”), blades and other components (“parts of other
engines and motors” and “parts of generators”), and gearboxes (“other fixed ratio speed
changers” and “other multiple and variable ratio speed changers”). 24 The import estimates
shown in Figure 12 should be viewed with caution because the underlying data used to produce
the figure are based on trade categories that are not exclusive to wind energy (e.g., they could
include generators for non-wind applications). The wind turbine component-level import
estimates shown in Figure 12 therefore required assumptions about the fraction of larger trade
categories likely to be represented by wind turbine components. 25
Figure 12 confirms that trends in the separate importation of certain wind turbine components is
consistent with the import trends for wind-powered generating sets presented in Figure 11. The
estimated imports of separate wind turbine components on a calendar-year basis, as presented in
Figure 12, increased from $1.2 billion in 2006 to $2.9 billion in 2008, before falling to roughly
$2 billion in 2009 (again, all dollar values are expressed in real 2009 dollars). Wind turbine
component exports in these trade categories are not shown in the figure because such exports are
likely a small (and uncertain) fraction of the broader trade category totals.
24
Estimating separate wind turbine component imports is complicated by the fact that the HTS does not contain
codes that are exclusive to wind turbine components. Included in the analysis presented here are: HTS
8501.64.0020 – “AC generators from 750 to 10,000 kVA”; HTS 8412.90.9080 – “parts of engines and motors”;
HTS 8503.00.9545 – “parts of generators (other than commutators, stators, and rotors)”; HTS 7308.20.0000 –
“towers and lattice masts”; HTS 8483.40.5010 – “fixed ratio speed changers”; and HTS 8543.40.5050 – “speed
changers other than fixed ratio.”
25
Specifically, based on a review of the countries of origin for the imports, personal communications with USITC
and AWEA staff, David (2010), and Wyden (2010), we assume that 70% of the 750–10,000 kVA AC generators
(HTS 8501.64.0020), 25% of the fixed and multiple/variable ratio speed changers (HTS 8483.40.5010 and HTS
8483.40.5050), 70% of the parts of engines, motors, and generators (HTS 8503.00.9545 and HTS 8412.90.9080),
and 95% of the towers and lattice masts (HTS 7308.20.0000) are wind-related components. We assume that these
percentages apply equally across the entire 2006-2009 time period.
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
2006 2007 2008 2009
Source: Berkeley Lab analysis of data from USITC DataWeb: http://dataweb.usitc.gov
Figure 12. Estimated Imports of Goods in Trade Categories That Include Wind Turbine
Components Using Wind-Related Import Percentage Assumptions
Looking behind the data presented in Figure 12 in more regional detail, notable trends include an
increase in imports of blades and other components (“parts of other engines and motors” and
“parts of generators”) from Mexico and India in 2009, and a sizable shift of tower and lattice
mast imports away from Europe and Canada and toward Asia. Similarly, from 2006-2009, an
increasing share of generator imports have come from Asia, whereas European imports have
declined. 26
Though Figures 11 and 12 depict a U.S. market that remains reliant on imports of wind power
equipment, that reliance has declined over time as growth in installed wind power capacity has
outpaced growth in wind turbine and component imports. Specifically, adding the data in Figure
11 and Figure 12 yields an estimate of total calendar-year wind turbine equipment imports –
including wind-powered generating sets as shown in Figure 11 and selected turbine components
as shown in Figure 12 – into the United States of $2.5 billion in 2006, $4.6 billion in 2007, $5.4
billion in 2008, and $4.2 billion in 2009. In aggregate, imports have substantially increased over
time, peaking in 2008 and then declining in 2009. Annual wind power capacity additions have,
26
Over the entire 2006-2009 timeframe, the largest source countries for the trade category that includes towers were:
Korea (20%), China (18%), Vietnam (12%), Denmark (11%), and Canada (10%) (in 2009, the top three countries
were China (28%), Korea (26%), and Vietnam (11%)). For the trade category that includes blades and other
components, the largest source countries from 2006-2009 were: Brazil (15%), Germany (8%), Denmark (7%),
Mexico (4%), and India (4%) (in 2009, the top three countries were Brazil (20%), Germany (11%), and Denmark
(8%)). Finally, for the trade category that includes generators, the largest source countries from 2006-2009 were
Germany (37%), Denmark (19%), Japan (16%), Spain (8%), and China (4%) (in 2009, the top three countries were
Germany (32%), Japan (31%), and Denmark (8%)). Not included is a country breakdown for the trade category that
includes gearboxes because only 25% of the imports in that category are assumed to represent wind power
equipment. Even among the categories highlighted here, source country designations should be viewed with caution
since the trade categories are not exclusive to wind energy.
To estimate the percentage share of imports and domestic production over time, one must
account for the fact that turbines and components imported at the end of one year may not be
installed until the following year. As such, in Figure 13 we determine the combined imports of
wind-powered generating and selected turbine components by using a 4-month lag (i.e., we use
monthly import data from September of the previous year to August of the current year to
estimate the value of imports used in wind turbine installations in the current year). Those
import figures are then compared to total wind turbine equipment-related costs on a calendar-
year basis. 27 When presented as a fraction of total equipment-related turbine costs in this
fashion, the overall import fraction is found to have declined significantly from more than 80%
in 2006 to roughly 40% in 2009. 28
16
12
Value of Selected Imports
(Customs Value, 4 month lag, 48% of turbine cost
10 Sept - Aug)
Billion 2009$
4
85% of turbine cost
2
0
2006 2007 2008 2009
Figure 13. Wind Power Equipment Imports as a Fraction of Total Turbine Cost
These figures should be considered rough approximations for the reasons stated earlier, and may
understate the wind power industry’s reliance on turbine and component imports because it is
possible that imports of wind power equipment are occurring under other HTS codes that are not
27
Total wind turbine costs ($/kW) are assumed to equal approximately 75% of the average project-level costs
reported later in this report in Figure 27, while wind turbine equipment-related costs are assumed to equal 85% of
total wind turbine costs (with the remaining 15% consisting of transportation, project management, and other soft
costs). To calculate total calendar-year wind turbine equipment-related costs, we multiply this wind turbine
equipment-related cost figure in $/kW by annual wind power capacity installations. Note that David (2010) does not
de-rate total wind turbine costs to estimate equipment-related costs alone, and the estimated import shares reported
by David (2010) therefore differ somewhat from those reported here and by AWEA (2010a).
28
Reporting these figures as a proportion of total wind project installed costs (not just wind turbine equipment-
related costs) is also of interest, but is complicated by the fact that non-turbine balance-of-plant costs may also
involve some level of imports. Nonetheless, if one simply assumes that 80% of non-turbine-equipment balance-of-
plant costs derive from domestic sources with the remaining 20% from imports, then the import fraction for total
wind project installed costs would equal 60% in 2006, declining to 53% in 2007, 37% in 2008, and 32% in 2009.
The average nameplate capacity of wind turbines installed in the United States in 2009 increased
to roughly 1.74 MW (Figure 14), up from 1.66 MW in 2008 and 1.65 MW in 2007. 29 Since
1998-99, average turbine nameplate capacity has increased by 145%, but growth in this metric
has slowed in recent years due to the dominance of GE’s 1.5 MW turbine and as a result of the
logistical challenges associated with transporting larger turbines to project sites. 30
2.0
1.74 MW
1.8 1.65 MW 1.66 MW
1.60 MW
1.6
Average Turbine Size (MW)
1.43 MW
1.4
1.21 MW
1.2
1.0 0.88 MW
0.8 0.71 MW
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
1998-99 2000-01 2002-03 2004-05 2006 2007 2008 2009
1,425 turbines 1,987 turbines 1,757 turbines 1,960 turbines 1,536 turbines 3,190 turbines 5,029 turbines 5,734 turbines
1,016 MW 1,758 MW 2,125 MW 2,803 MW 2,454 MW 5,249 MW 8,350 MW 9,994 MW
29
Modest differences exist between these figures and those presented by AWEA (2010a) for the reasons discussed
in footnote 2.
30
Figure 14 (as well as a number of the other figures and tables included in this report) combines data into both one-
or two-year periods in order to avoid distortions related to small sample size in the PTC lapse years of 2000, 2002,
and 2004; though not a PTC lapse year, 1998 is grouped with 1999 due to the small sample of 1998 projects.
In addition to nameplate capacity ratings, average hub heights and rotor diameters have also
scaled with time. The average hub height of wind turbines installed in the United States in 2009
was 78.8 meters (Figure 15), up slightly from 78.5 meters in 2008 and 78.2 meters in 2007.
Since 1998-99, the average turbine hub height has increased by 39% (or 22.3 meters), though
year-on-year growth has slowed in the more recent years. Average rotor diameters have
increased at a somewhat more rapid pace: the average rotor diameter of wind turbines installed
in the United States in 2009 was 81.6 meters (Figure 15), up from 79.4 meters in 2008 and 79.2
meters in 2007. Since 1998-99, the average rotor diameter has increased by 69% (or 33.2
meters). For turbines installed in 2009, the maximum hub height and rotor diameter were 80
meters and 101 meters, respectively (a higher maximum hub height of 105 meter exists for
turbines installed in 2008). These trends in hub height and rotor scaling are one of several
factors impacting the project-level capacity factors highlighted later in this report.
80
70
60 Rotor Diameter
50 Hub Height
40
30
20
10
0
1998-99 2000-01 2002-03 2004-05 2006 2007 2008 2009
1283 turbines 1500 turbines 2004 turbines 1807 turbines 1500 turbines 2922 turbines 5047 turbines 5734 turbines
935 MW 1,446 MW 2,227 MW 2,680 MW 2,394 MW 5,001 MW 8,376 MW 9,994 MW
Figure 15. Average Rotor Diameter and Hub Height Installed During Period
The Average Size of Wind Power Projects Resumed its Upward Trend
As the wind power industry has grown, so too has the average size of installed wind power
projects. Projects installed in 2009 averaged nearly 91 MW, which is below the 120 MW
average size of projects built in 2007, but is otherwise larger than in any other period (Figure
16).
The long-term increase in average project size may reflect a number of interrelated trends
highlighted elsewhere in this report: growing demand for wind power; the upward march in
turbine size; the large turbine orders that had become standard practice up until the 2008/2009
credit crisis; consolidation among project developers to support those orders; and increasing
turbine and project costs, which may require taking full advantage of any and all economies of
scale. Whatever the specific cause, larger project sizes reflect an increasingly mature energy
source that is beginning to penetrate into the domestic electricity market in a significant way.
80
60
40
20
0
1998-99 2000-01 2002-03 2004-05 2006 2007 2008 2009
29 projects 27 projects 46 projects 44 projects 35 projects 45 projects 97 projects 110 projects
Table 7 provides a listing of announced acquisition and investment activity among U.S. wind
project developers from 2002 through 2009. 32 At least six significant transactions involving
roughly 18 GW of in-development wind power projects (also called the development “pipeline”)
were announced in 2009, similar to the five transactions and 19 GW in 2008, but well below the
31
Projects less than 2 MW in size are excluded from Figure 16 so that a large number of single-turbine “projects”
(that, in practice, may have been developed as part of a larger, aggregated project) do not end up skewing the
average. For projects installed in phases, each phase is considered to be a separate project. Projects that are
partially constructed in two different years are counted as coming online in the year in which a clear majority of the
capacity was completed. If roughly equal amounts of capacity are built in each year, then the full project is counted
as coming online in the later year. Due to methodological differences, these figures differ somewhat from those
presented in AWEA (2010a), though the trend is consistent.
32
Only announced transactions that are believed to involve 500 MW or more of in-development U.S. wind power
projects are included. Not included are transactions in which one developer purchases another developer’s project
pipeline, without an actual acquisition of or investment in that developer.
Treasury Cash Grant Expands Financing Options, Buoys the Wind Sector
Due to the global credit crisis, wind power project financing in the United States declined
precipitously at the close of 2008, with many lenders and tax equity investors sidelined by
extreme uncertainty and shrinking tax capacity. By mid-February of 2009, however, the U.S.
Congress had passed the Recovery Act, parts of which were intended to alleviate financial
constraints on the industry. Most notably, Section 1603 of the Recovery Act enables wind (and
other qualifying) power projects to temporarily choose a 30% cash grant administered by the
U.S. Treasury in lieu of either the PTC or a 30% investment tax credit (ITC). Title IV of the
Recovery Act also expands an existing federal loan guarantee program administered by DOE to
renewable energy projects using commercially proven (rather than just innovative) technology.
By replacing the PTC with an up-front 30% cash grant, Section 1603 greatly reduces, but does
not completely eliminate, the dependence of wind project developers on third-party tax equity
investors. Tax appetite from outside of the project itself is still needed to efficiently use
accelerated depreciation deductions in the year that they are generated. Many developers,
however, have found that financing their projects with low-cost debt rather than more-expensive
tax equity can more-than-make-up-for the value lost from carrying forward depreciation
deductions until they can be fully used within the project itself.
The Section 1603 cash grant program has been heavily subscribed by the industry. Owners of
more than 6,400 MW – i.e., more than 64% – of the wind power capacity installed in 2009
elected the grant in lieu of the PTC. As much as 2,400 MW of this capacity may not have been
built in 2009 had the cash grant not been available (Bolinger et al. 2010). And in another sign
that Section 1603 has accomplished its goal of reducing dependence on the tax equity market,
only about seven of the more-than-sixty 2009 projects that elected the grant were financed using
third-party tax equity (Chadbourne & Parke 2010a); many of the rest substituted project-level
term debt for third-party tax equity (and are presumably planning to carry forward unused
depreciation deductions), while still others were built by developers that have their own internal
tax appetite.
At present, wind power projects must be under construction by the end of 2010, and online by
the end of 2012, in order to qualify for the grant. Congress is considering several bills that
would extend the grant program in some form or fashion, and one oft-cited rationale for an
extension is that the tax equity market has not yet recovered sufficiently to supply the amount of
capital that the market would otherwise require. As of May 2010, there were roughly a dozen
tax equity investors active in the wind power market – up from the handful of investors that
maintained their presence throughout 2009, but still down from the market heights of early 2008
(Stolarski et al. 2010, Martin 2010). That said, as of June 2010, more than $2 billion of tax
Although the tax equity market may still be somewhat constrained, capital has been flowing
more-freely in the debt market, both from banks and institutional lenders. So-called “mini-
perms” (i.e., term debt with a balloon payment due in 5-7 years) dominated for much of 2009,
though tenors began to lengthen somewhat as the year progressed. By early 2010, fully
amortizing loans were once again seen in the market, some with tenors as long as 15-17 years.
Spreads remain high – as high as 350 basis points above LIBOR in early 2010, compared to just
125 basis points a few years ago – but were reportedly under downward pressure in mid-2010 as
the number of banks active in the wind power market increased to more than thirty (Zaelke et al.
2010), and in fact had fallen below 300 basis points according to some sources (Chadbourne &
Parke 2010b).
The rebound in the debt market is just one reason that there has been relatively weak demand for
the federal loan guarantee program that was created as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and
expanded by the Recovery Act to include projects using commercially proven technologies.
Other oft-cited reasons that the Section 1703 (for projects using innovative technology) and
Section 1705 (for projects using commercially proven technology) loan guarantee programs have
not been more popular include the relatively slow initial implementation of these programs,
challenging application requirements (including the need to for a federal environmental review
and complying with the Davis-Bacon Wage Act), initial inflexibility with regard to financing
structures involving third-party tax equity, and the additional complexities and time to close that
come from having another party – DOE – at the bargaining table (Bailey 2010, Zaelke et al.
2010, Stolarski et al. 2010, Chadbourne & Parke 2010b). By mid-July 2010, just two wind-
related loan guarantees had been awarded under the Section 1703 program: Nordic Windpower
received a $16 million loan guarantee to expand its wind turbine manufacturing facility in
Pocatello, Idaho, while First Wind received a $117 million loan guarantee for its 30 MW Kahuku
wind project (which includes battery storage) in Hawaii. No wind power project has yet been
awarded a guarantee under the Section 1705 program for commercial technologies, but that
program could be particularly useful for larger wind power projects that can spread the
transaction costs over more capacity, and that might otherwise be too large to raise debt
financing through the normal channels (Zaelke et al. 2010, Stolarski et al. 2010, Chadbourne &
Parke 2010b).
Independent power producers (IPPs) continued to dominate the ownership of wind power
projects in 2009, owning 83% (8,247 MW) of all new capacity additions (Figure 17). Nearly
16% of the total wind power capacity additions in 2009 are owned by local electric utilities, with
investor-owned utilities (IOUs) owning 1,057 MW and publicly owned utilities (POUs) owning
another 510 MW. Community wind power projects – defined here as projects using turbines
over 100 kW in size and completely or partly owned by towns, schools, commercial customers,
40
2009 Capacity by
Community
Owner Type
35
Publicly Owned Utility (POU)
Cumulative Installed Capacity (GW)
20
15
IOU:
10 1,057 MW
(11%)
5
POU: Community:
510 MW (5%) 180 MW (2%)
0
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Figure 17. Cumulative and 2009 Wind Power Capacity Categorized by Owner Type
The dominance of IPP ownership, and the more recent trend towards increased utility ownership,
has been driven by several factors. Up until the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) clarified the
issue in 2005, some IOUs were uncertain as to whether they could claim the PTC on utility-
owned wind power projects (due to the requirement that PTC-eligible power must be sold to an
unrelated party – in 2005 the IRS clarified that ratepayers are indeed unrelated parties). More
broadly, when wind energy was a small part of the generation mix, some utilities felt that buying
wind power was less risky than owning wind power projects. As utilities have gained comfort
with wind power over the years, however, their interest in ownership has increased for several
reasons: IOUs are typically allowed to earn a regulated return on project ownership (i.e., by
adding it to their rate base) but not on power purchases; credit rating agencies have at times
considered long-term power purchase agreements to be debt-like instruments, thereby potentially
negatively impacting a utility's credit rating; and ownership places the utility in a position of
greater control over the cost and price of wind energy that it receives. As a result of these drivers,
utility ownership of wind power projects may continue to increase in the coming years.
Electric utilities continued to be the dominant purchasers of wind power (see Figure 18), with
58% of the new 2009 capacity selling electricity under long-term power purchase agreements
(PPAs) to either IOUs (36%) or POUs (22%). In aggregate, these two types of utilities buy
power from 62% of the cumulative wind power capacity in the United States (IOUs purchase
44% and POUs purchase 18%).
40 2009 Capacity by
On-Site Off-Take Category
35
Power Marketer
Cumulative Installed Capacity (GW)
Merchant:
20
3,779 MW
(38%) POU:
15
2,189 MW
(22%)
10
5
On-Site: Marketer:
50 MW (0.5%) 399 MW (4%)
0
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Figure 18. Cumulative and 2009 Wind Power Capacity Categorized by Power Off-Take
Arrangement
33
Hedges are often structured as a “fixed-for-floating” power price swap – a purely financial arrangement whereby
the wind power project swaps the “floating” revenue stream that it earns from spot power sales for a “fixed” revenue
stream based on an agreed-upon strike price. For some projects (especially where natural gas is virtually always the
marginal supply unit), the hedge is structured in the natural gas market rather than the power market, in order to take
advantage of the greater liquidity and longer terms available in the forward gas market.
Finally, roughly 50 MW of the wind power additions in 2009 that used turbines over 100 kW in
size were interconnected on the customer side of the utility meter, with the power being
consumed on site rather than sold.
34
Power marketers are defined here to include not only traditional marketers such as PPM Energy (now part of
Iberdrola), but also the wholesale power marketing affiliates of large investor-owned utilities (e.g., PPL Energy Plus
or FirstEnergy Solutions), which may buy wind power on behalf of their load-serving affiliates.
Although some of the cost pressures facing the industry in recent years (e.g., rising materials
costs, the weak dollar, turbine and component shortages) have eased somewhat, it will take time
before relief flows through the project development pipeline to impact overall average wind
power prices. After all, projects built in 2009 may have purchased turbines in 2007 or 2008, and
may have established contractual pricing terms at a similar point in time. As such, 2009 was
another year of rising wind power prices.
Berkeley Lab collects data on wind power sales prices from the sources listed in the Appendix,
resulting in a dataset that consists of price data for 180 wind power projects installed between
1998 and the end of 2009. These projects total 12,813 MW, or 38% of the wind power capacity
brought on line in the United States over the 1998-2009 timeframe. 35 The dataset excludes
merchant plants and projects that sell renewable energy certificates (RECs) separately. The
prices in the dataset therefore reflect the bundled price of electricity and RECs as sold by the
project owner under a power purchase agreement. Because these prices are suppressed by the
receipt of available state and federal incentives (e.g., the prices reported here would be at least
$20/MWh higher without the PTC / ITC / Treasury Grant), they do not represent wind energy
generation costs.
Based on these data, the capacity-weighted average power sales price from the sample of post-
1997 wind power projects remains relatively low by historical standards, but has been steadily
increasing in recent years. Figure 19 shows the cumulative capacity-weighted average wind
power price (along with the range of individual project prices falling between the 25th and 75th
percentiles) in each calendar year from 1999 through 2009. Based on the limited sample of 7
projects built in 1998 or 1999 and totaling 450 MW, the weighted-average price of wind energy
in 1999 was $65/MWh (expressed in 2009 dollars). By 2009, in contrast, the cumulative sample
of projects built from 1998 through 2009 had grown to 180 projects totaling 12,813 MW, with an
average price of $45/MWh (with 50% of individual project prices falling between $33/MWh and
$53/MWh). 36 Although Figure 19 does show a modest increase in the weighted-average wind
power price since 2005, reflecting rising prices from new projects, the cumulative nature of the
graphic mutes the degree of increase.
35
Three primary factors significantly restrict the size of this sample: (1) projects located within ERCOT (in Texas)
fall outside of FERC’s jurisdiction, and are therefore not required to report prices (reduces sample by about 8,600
MW); (2) the increasing number of utility-owned projects are not included, since these projects do not sell their
power on the wholesale market (reduces sample by about 5,300 MW); and (3) the increasing number of merchant
(or quasi-merchant) projects that sell power and RECs separately are not included in the sample, because the power
price reported by these projects only represents a portion of total revenue received (reduces sample by roughly
another 4,200 MW). In addition, certain “qualifying facilities” are not required to report their power sales to FERC.
36
All wind power pricing data presented in this report exclude the few projects located in Hawaii. Those projects
are considered outliers in that they are significantly more expensive to build than projects in the continental United
States, and receive a power sales price that is significantly higher-than-normal, in part because it has historically
been linked to the price of oil.
50
40
30
20
10
Cumulative Capacity-Weighted Average Wind Power Price (with 25% and 75% quartiles)
0
Year: 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Projects: 7 9 19 32 47 65 81 100 120 146 180
MW: 450 550 702 1,450 2,303 3,112 4,065 5,140 7,709 9,843 12,813
Figure 19. Cumulative Capacity-Weighted Average Wind Power Prices Over Time
To better illustrate changes in the price of power from newly built wind power projects, Figure
20 shows average wind power sales prices in 2009, grouped by project vintage (i.e., by each
project’s initial commercial operation date). 37 Although the limited project sample and the
considerable variability in prices across projects installed in a given time period complicate
analysis of national price trends (with averages subject to regional and other factors), the general
trend exhibited by the capacity-weighted-average prices (i.e., the blue columns) nevertheless
shows that prices bottomed out for projects built in 2002 and 2003, and have since risen
significantly. 38 Specifically, the capacity-weighted average 2009 sales price, based on projects in
the sample built in 2009, was roughly $61/MWh, up from an average of $51/MWh for the
sample of projects built in 2008, and nearly double the average of $32/MWh among projects
built during the low point in 2002 and 2003.
37
Prices from two individual projects built during the 2000-2001 period, and one project built in 2008, are not
shown in Figure 20 (due to the scale of the y-axis), but are included in the capacity-weighted averages for those
periods. The omitted prices are roughly $95/MWh and $150/MWh in the earlier period, and $126/MWh for the
2008 project.
38
Although it may seem counterintuitive, the weighted-average price in 1999 for projects built in 1998 and 1999
(shown in Figure 19 to be about $65/MWh) is significantly higher than the weighted-average price in 2009 for
projects built in 1998 and 1999 (shown in Figure 20 to be about $33/MWh) for three reasons: (1) the sample size is
larger in Figure 20, due to the fact that 2009 prices are presented, rather than 1999 prices as in Figure 19 (i.e., we
were unable to obtain early-year pricing for some of the projects built in 1998-1999); (2) two of the larger projects
built in 1998 and 1999 (for which both 1999 and 2009 prices are available, meaning that these projects are
represented within both figures) have nominal PPA prices that actually decline, rather than remaining flat or
escalating, over time; and (3) inflating all prices to constant 2009 dollar terms impacts older (i.e., 1999) prices more
than it does more-recent (i.e., 2009) prices.
80
2009 Wind Power Price (2009 $/MWh)
70
60
50
40
30
20
Capacity-Weighted Average 2009 Wind Power Price (by project vintage)
10
Individual Project 2009 Wind Power Price (by project vintage)
0
1998-99 2000-01 2002-03 2004-05 2006 2007 2008 2009
13 projects 20 projects 32 projects 21 projects 14 projects 22 projects 28 projects 30 projects
612 MW 853 MW 1,655 MW 1,269 MW 751 MW 2,938 MW 2,106 MW 2,629 MW
The underlying variability in wind power prices within a year is caused in part by regional
factors, which may affect not only project capacity factors (depending on the strength of the
wind resource in a given region), but also development and installation costs (depending on a
region’s physical geography, population density, labor rates, or even regulatory processes). It is
also possible that regions with higher wholesale electricity prices or with greater demand for
renewable energy will, in general, yield higher wind energy contract prices due to market factors.
Figure 21 shows individual project and average 2009 wind power prices by region for just those
wind power projects installed from 2006-2009 (i.e., the more-recent period of higher prices, as
shown in Figure 20), with regions as defined in Figure 22. Although sample size is quite small
and therefore problematic in numerous regions, Texas and the Heartland region appear to be
among the lowest price areas on average, while New England, California, and the East are
among the higher price regions. 39
39
Average prices in Texas and New England, in particular, may not be representative as those averages include just
three and two projects, respectively. Once again, sample size in Texas is severely limited (despite the enormous
growth of wind power capacity in that state) because generators located within ERCOT are not required to file
pricing information with FERC. As such, the pricing information for Texas provided in this report comes primarily
from projects located in the Texas panhandle, which is within the Southwest Power Pool (SPP) rather than ERCOT.
Note also that projects in this area have not experienced the same level of curtailment as is common in ERCOT
which, in combination with a strong wind resource in the region and relatively low capital costs (two of the three
projects, totaling 75% of the aggregate capacity, were built earlier in the 2006-2009 time period), may have
facilitated lower prices than in other parts of Texas. One of the two New England projects in the sample over this
period is not shown in Figure 21 because its price ($126/MWh) exceeds the scale of the y-axis; however, this
project’s price is included in the capacity-weighted average for New England.
70
60
50
40
30
Figure 21. 2009 Wind Power Prices by Region: 2006-2009 Projects Only
Maine Zone
Mid-C
• °
Minnesota Hub
COB
• ° • Mass Hub
•NYISO•A •
NYISO G
WAUE interface Michigan Hub
NI Hub
•
°Zone • Cinergy Hub •PJM West
Iowa
NP-15
• •
Northwest
Illinois Hub •
California
DOM°
Mead Mountain
°Zone
Zone
• •
Four Corners Texas
Missouri
•
SP-15
Heartland
Great Lakes
•
Palo Verde
East
New England
Southeast
•Entergy
• ERCOT West
Note: The pricing nodes represented by an open, rather than closed, bullet do not have complete pricing history back through 2003.
Figure 22. Map of Regions and Wholesale Electricity Price Hubs Used in Analysis
The wind power sales prices presented in this report reflect only the bundled sale of both electricity and RECs;
excluded are projects that sell RECs separately from electricity, thereby generating two sources of revenue. REC
markets are highly fragmented in the United States, but consist of two distinct segments: compliance markets in
which RECs are purchased to meet state RPS obligations, and green power markets in which RECs are purchased
on a voluntary basis.
The figures below present indicative monthly data of spot-market REC prices in both compliance and voluntary
markets, grouped into High-Price and Low-Price markets; data for compliance markets focus on the “Class I” or
“Main Tier” of the RPS policies. Clearly, spot REC prices have varied substantially, both among states and over
time within individual states. Among compliance markets in the Northeast, prices for RECs used to serve RPS
requirements in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island remained relatively flat in 2009, following a steep
drop in 2008, while prices in the new RPS compliance markets in New Hampshire and Maine were at levels
consistent with the other Northeastern states. REC prices to serve RPS requirements in New Jersey, Illinois, and
Delaware remained relatively flat during the latter half of the 2009, after declining earlier in the year. REC prices
remained relatively low in several other compliance markets (Texas, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Washington
D.C.) due to a surplus of eligible renewable energy supply relative to RPS-driven demand in those markets.
Prices for RECs offered in voluntary markets in 2009 ranged from an annual average of less than $2/MWh for
national voluntary wind RECs (which continue to closely track the price of Texas RECs) to approximately
$7/MWh for voluntary wind RECs in the West.
High-Price REC Markets Low-Price REC Markets
$80 $20
CT Class I DE Class I IL Wind DC Tier 1 MD Tier 1
MA Class I ME New NH Class I PA Tier 1 TX
NJ Class I RI New National (Voluntary) West (Voluntary)
$60 $15
2009 $/MWh
$40 $10
$20 $5
$0 $0
Jan-05
Jan-06
Jan-07
Jan-08
Jan-09
Jan-10
Jul-05
Jul-06
Jul-07
Jul-08
Jul-09
Jul-05
Jul-06
Jul-07
Jul-08
Jul-09
Jan-05
Jan-06
Jan-07
Jan-08
Jan-09
Jan-10
Sources: Evolution Markets and Spectron. Plotted prices represent the price of the last monthly trade (if available), or the mid-
point of Bid and Offer prices, for the current or nearest compliance year.
A simple comparison of the wind power prices presented in the previous section to recent
wholesale electricity prices throughout the United States demonstrates that while wind power
had consistently been priced (on average) at the low end of the range of wholesale electricity
prices going back through 2003, the drop in wholesale electricity prices in 2009 pushed wind
energy to the top of that range. Specifically, Figure 23 shows the range (minimum and
At least on a cumulative basis within the sample of projects reported here, average wind power
prices compared favorably to wholesale electricity prices from 2003 through 2008. The increase
in wind power prices in 2009, however, combined with the deep reduction in wholesale
electricity prices (driven by lower natural gas prices), reversed this long-term trend in 2009.
Although low natural gas prices are, in part, attributable to the recession-induced drop in energy
demand, the discovery and early development of significant shale gas deposits has resulted in
reduced expectations for increases in natural gas prices going forward. As a result, natural gas
prices may not rebound to earlier levels as the economy recovers, putting the near-term
comparative economic position of wind energy at some risk (especially if wind energy costs do
not also decrease – see a later section suggesting that cost reductions may be on the horizon).
90
Wind project sample includes
80
projects built from 1998-2009
70
60
2009 $/MWh
50
40
30
0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
47 projects 65 projects 81 projects 100 projects 120 projects 146 projects 180 projects
2,303 MW 3,112 MW 4,065 MW 5,140 MW 7,709 MW 9,843 MW 12,813 MW
Figure 23. Average Cumulative Wind and Wholesale Electricity Prices Over Time
Though Figure 23 portrays a national comparison, there are clearly regional differences in
wholesale electricity prices and in the average price of wind power. Moreover, as shown earlier
40
A flat block of power is defined as a constant amount of electricity generated and sold over a specified time
period. Though wind power projects do not provide a perfectly flat block of power, as a common point of
comparison, a flat block is not an unreasonable starting point. In other words, the time-variability of wind energy is
often such that its wholesale market value is somewhat lower than, but not too dissimilar from, that of a flat block of
(non-firm) power.
41
The five pricing nodes represented in Figure 22 by an open, rather than closed, bullet do not have complete
pricing history back through 2003. As such, the wholesale electricity range presented in Figure 23 does not, in every
year, reflect data from the complete set of hubs.
90
Wind project sample includes projects built from 2006-2009
80
70
60
2009 $/MWh
50
40
30
Figure 24. Wind and Wholesale Electricity Prices by Region: 2006-2009 Projects Only
Important Note: Notwithstanding the comparisons made in Figures 23 and 24, it should be
recognized that neither the wind nor wholesale electricity prices presented in this section reflect
the full social costs of power generation and delivery. Specifically, the wind power prices are
suppressed by virtue of federal and, in some cases, state tax and financial incentives.
Furthermore, these prices do not fully reflect integration, resource adequacy, or transmission
costs. At the same time, wholesale electricity prices do not fully reflect transmission costs, may
not fully reflect capital and fixed operating costs, and are suppressed by virtue of any financial
incentives provided to fossil-fueled generation and by not fully accounting for the environmental
and social costs of that generation. In addition, wind power prices – once established – are
typically fixed and known (because wind energy is often sold through long-term, fixed-price
power purchase agreements), whereas wholesale electricity prices are short-term and therefore
subject to change over time. Finally, the location of the wholesale electricity nodes and the
assumption of a flat-block of power are not perfectly consistent with the location and output
profile of the sample of wind power projects.
42
Although its price ($126/MWh) is factored into the capacity-weighted average wind power price (depicted by the
red dash), one New England project is not shown in Figure 24, due to the compressed y-axis scale. As discussed in
footnote 39, the average wind energy prices for Texas and New England presented here should be viewed with
caution.
Wind power sales prices are affected by a number of factors, two of the most important of which
are installed project costs and project performance. 43 Figures 25 and 26 illustrate the importance
of these two variables.
Figure 25 shows the relationship between project-level installed costs and power sales prices in
2009 for a sample of more than 10,500 MW of wind power projects installed in the United States
from 1998 through 2009. 44 Though the scatter is considerable, in general, projects with higher
installed costs also have higher wind power prices.
90
2009 Wind Power Price (2009 $/MWh)
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Sample includes 120 projects built from 1998-2009, totaling 10,519 MW
0
900 1100 1300 1500 1700 1900 2100 2300 2500 2700
Installed Cost (2009 $/kW)
Source: Berkeley Lab
Figure 25. 2009 Wind Power Price as a Function of Installed Project Costs
43
Operations and maintenance (O&M) costs are another important variable that affects wind power prices. A later
section of this report covers trends in project-level O&M costs.
44
In Figures 25 and 26, three individual project outliers (the same three described earlier in footnote 37) are
obscured by the compressed y-axis scale, yet still influence the trend line.
90
2009 Wind Power Price (2009 $/MWh)
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Sample includes 149 projects built from 1998-2008, totaling 10,102 MW
0
15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
2009 Capacity Factor (%)
Source: Berkeley Lab
Figure 26. 2009 Wind Power Price as a Function of 2009 Capacity Factor
The next few sections of this report explore trends in installed costs and project performance in
more detail, as both factors can have significant effects on wind power prices.
The Installed Cost of Wind Power Projects Continued to Rise in 2009, but
Reductions May Be on the Horizon
Berkeley Lab compiles data on the installed cost of wind power projects in the United States,
including data on 115 projects completed in 2009 totaling 9,656 MW, or 97% of the wind power
capacity installed in that year. In aggregate, the dataset includes 405 completed wind power
projects in the continental United States totaling 28,522 MW, and equaling roughly 81% of all
wind power capacity installed in the United States at the end of 2009. In general, reported
project costs reflect turbine purchase and installation, balance of plant, and any substation and/or
interconnection expenses. Data sources are diverse, however, and are not all of equal credibility,
so emphasis should be placed on overall trends in the data, rather than on individual project-level
estimates.
As shown in Figure 27, the installed cost of wind power projects declined dramatically from the
beginning of the industry in California in the 1980s through the early 2000s (falling by roughly
Some of the cost pressures facing the industry in recent years (e.g., rising materials costs, the
weak dollar, and turbine and component shortages) have eased since late 2008. As a result,
while costs may – on average – remain high for a period of time as developers continue to work
their way through the dwindling backlog of turbines purchased in early 2008 at peak prices under
long-term frame agreements, 48 there are expectations that average installed costs will decline
over time (see next section, on wind turbine price trends).
5,000 Individual Project Cost (405 online projects totaling 28,522 MW)
4,500 Capacity-Weighted Average Project Cost
Installed Project Cost (2009 $/kW)
3,500
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Source: Berkeley Lab (some data points suppressed to protect confidentiality)
45
Limited sample size early on – particularly in the 1980s – makes it difficult to pin down this number with a high
degree of confidence.
46
Learning curves have been used extensively to understand past cost trends and to forecast future cost reductions
for a variety of energy technologies, including wind energy. Learning curves start with the premise that increases in
the cumulative production or installation of a given technology leads to a reduction in its costs. The principal
parameter calculated by learning curve studies is the learning rate: for every doubling of cumulative
production/installation, the learning rate specifies the associated percentage reduction in costs. Based on the
installed cost data presented in Figure 27 and global cumulative wind power installations, learning rates can be
calculated as follows: 9.4% (using data from 1982 through 2009) or 14.4% (using data only during the period of
cost reduction, 1982-2004).
47
It is important to recognize that wind power projects were not alone in seeing upward pressure on project costs –
other types of power plants experienced similar increases in capital costs. For example, the IHS CERA Power
Capital Cost Index of coal, gas, and wind power plants shows a 74% capital cost increase from 2000 to the end of
2009 (IHS CERA 2009).
48
For example, data compiled by Berkeley Lab show an estimated weighted-average cost for a sample of more than
4,300 MW of projects likely to be built in 2010 of $2,230/kW, or $110/kW higher than for the sample of projects
completed in 2009.
4,500
4,000
Sample includes projects built in 2007, 2008, and 2009
Installed Project Cost (2009 $/kW)
3,500
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
Average Project Cost
500
Individual Project Cost
0
≤ 5 MW 5-20 MW 20-50 MW 50-100 MW 100-200 MW >200 MW
48 MW 222 MW 888 MW 4,576 MW 10,518 MW 3,310 MW
23 projects 18 projects 24 projects 59 projects 75 projects 13 projects
Figure 28. Installed Wind Power Project Costs by Project Size: 2007-2009 Projects
Regional differences in average project costs are also apparent, and may occur due to variations
in development costs, transportation costs, siting and permitting requirements and timeframes,
and other balance-of-plant and construction expenditures. Considering only projects in the
sample that were installed in 2007, 2008, and 2009, Figure 29 shows that the capacity-weighted
average cost equaled $2,000/kW nationwide over this period. Texas was the lowest-cost region,
while California and New England were the highest-cost regions; all other regions came in close
to the nationwide average. 49
49
Graphical presentation of the data in this way should be viewed with some caution, as numerous factors influence
project costs (e.g., whether projects are repowered vs. “greenfield” development, etc.). Actual cost differences
among some regions may therefore be more (or less) significant than they appear in Figure 29.
2,500
2,000
1,500
0
Texas Mountain Heartland Great Lakes Northwest East California New England
43 projects 19 projects 60 projects 21 projects 28 projects 19 projects 6 projects 16 projects
5,361 MW 2,052 MW 5,169 MW 2,575 MW 2,371 MW 1,539 MW 326 MW 169 MW
Figure 29. Installed Wind Power Project Costs by Region: 2007-2009 Projects
Wind Turbine Prices Have Begun to Show Signs of Easing, but Remain
High By Historical Standards
Increases in wind power prices and overall installed project costs mirror increases in the cost of
wind turbines over the last several years. Berkeley Lab has gathered data on 69 U.S. wind
turbine transactions totaling 22,920 MW, including eight transactions summing to 1,674 MW
announced in 2009. Figure 30 depicts these reported wind turbine transaction prices.
Sources of transaction price data vary, but most derive from press releases and news reports.
Wind turbine transactions differ in the services offered (e.g., whether towers and installation are
provided, the length of the service agreement, etc.) and on the timing of future turbine delivery,
driving some of the observed intra-year variability in transaction prices. Nonetheless, most of
the transactions included in the Berkeley Lab dataset likely include turbines, towers, erection,
and limited warranty and service agreements. 50
Since hitting a low point of roughly $700/kW in the 2000-2002 timeframe, average wind turbine
prices have increased by approximately $800/kW (>100%) through 2009. The trend of
increasing turbine prices also suggests that most of the rise in installed project costs reported
earlier ($810/kW from 2001-04 through 2009) has come from turbine price increases. Increases
in turbine prices over this period have been caused by several factors, including a decline in the
value of the U.S. dollar relative to the Euro, increased materials and energy input prices (e.g.,
steel and oil), a general move by manufacturers to improve their profitability, shortages in certain
turbine components, an up-scaling of turbine size (and hub height), and improved sophistication
of turbine design (e.g., improved grid interactions).
50
Because of data limitations, the precise content of many of the individual transactions is not known.
1,800
Turbine Transaction Price (2009 $/kW)
1,600
1,400
1,200
1,000
800
Orders <100 MW
600
Orders from 100 - 300 MW
400
Orders >300 MW
200 Polynomial Trend Line
0
Jan-97 Jan-98 Jan-99 Jan-00 Jan-01 Jan-02 Jan-03 Jan-04 Jan-05 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10
Announcement Date
Source: Berkeley Lab
Figure 30. Reported U.S. Wind Turbine Transaction Prices Over Time
Though turbine price increases have been the rule for a number of years, evidence is beginning
to emerge that those days have ended, at least temporarily. As reflected by the small number of
recent data points on turbine transactions shown in Figure 30, visibility of wind turbine
transaction prices has declined as the financial crisis has taken its toll and developers sit on
turbine supply frame agreements that have exceeded near-term project development plans.
Energy and commodity prices have dropped since mid-2008, however, and the supply-demand
balance for turbines has resulted in a turn towards a buyer’s market (Bloomberg New Energy
Finance 2010a; BTM 2010). As a result, UBS (2010) estimates a 13% decline in average turbine
sales prices in 2009, while Bloomberg New Energy Finance (2010a) estimates that turbines
delivered in the second half of 2010 are priced at a 15% discount relative to turbines delivered in
the second half of 2008. More favorable terms are also on offer for turbine purchasers, including
lengthier servicing agreements. These price reductions and improved terms can be expected,
over time, to exert downward pressure on total project costs and wind power prices.
Wind Power Project Performance Has Generally Improved Over Time, but
Has Leveled Off in Recent Years
Though turbine and installed project cost increases have driven wind power prices higher over
the past several years, improvements in wind power project performance have mitigated these
This section presents excerpts from a Berkeley Lab compilation of project-level capacity-factor
data. The full data sample consists of 260 wind power projects built between 1983 and 2008,
and totaling 22,366 MW (89% of nationwide installed wind power capacity at the end of 2008). 51
Focusing on a progressively larger cumulative sample of projects in each calendar year, 52 Figure
31 demonstrates that average sample-wide wind power project capacity factors have, in general,
gradually increased over time, from just over 24% in 1999 (for projects installed through 1998)
to a high of nearly 34% in 2008 (for projects installed through 2007), before dropping to 30% in
2009 (for projects installed through 2008).
35%
30%
25%
Capacity Factor
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
Year: 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Projects: 11 17 77 124 137 163 190 217 258 299 242
MW: 701 1,158 2,199 3,955 4,458 5,784 6,467 9,289 11,253 16,068 22,346
Source: Berkeley Lab
Figure 31. Average Cumulative Sample-Wide Capacity Factor by Calendar Year
The general trend of increasing capacity factors shown in Figure 31 may be due to a combination
of factors, including – most prominently – the increasing hub heights and rotor diameters of
more recently completed projects (documented in an earlier section) that also increase fleet-wide
average turbine size over time. Turbines with higher hub heights and with larger rotor diameters
(relative to nameplate capacity) will tend to have higher average capacity factors.
51
Though some performance data for wind power projects installed in 2009 are available, those data do not span an
entire year of operations. As such, for the purpose of this section, the focus is on projects with commercial
operation dates in 2008 and earlier.
52
There are fewer individual projects – though more capacity – in the cumulative sample for 2009 than there were in
2008. This is due to the sampling method used by the EIA, which focuses on a subset of larger projects throughout
the year, before eventually capturing the entire sample some months after the year has ended. As a result, it might
be late 2010 before the EIA reports 2009 performance data for all of the wind power projects that it tracks, and in
the mean time, this report is left with a smaller sample consisting mostly of the larger projects in each state.
• Wind Resource Variation: In part as a result of El Niño, the year 2009, for example, was
considered to be a generally poor wind year throughout much of the United States, with
average wind speeds below their long-term average over much of the country (e.g., 3Tier
2010). The year 2008, meanwhile, was generally considered to be a good wind year. As a
result, the large drop in average capacity factors between 2008 and 2009 is, in part, a
reflection of natural yearly variations in national average wind resource conditions.
• Wind Power Curtailment: Increasing amounts of wind power curtailment in recent years
also significantly reduced sample-wide average capacity factors in 2009. Curtailment of
project output due primarily to transmission inadequacy (and, as a consequence, low
wholesale electricity prices) is a growing problem, primarily in Texas, but also in other
markets. Due to transmission inadequacy, wind power projects in West Texas (which
represent a growing fraction of U.S. installations), for example, have been forced by grid
operators to reduce their output (or have voluntarily chosen to do so in response to negative
price signals in the wholesale electricity market). Figure 32 shows that roughly 17% of
potential wind energy generation within ERCOT was curtailed in 2009, compared to 8% in
2008 and just 1% in 2007 (ERCOT 2010). Curtailment was also experienced, to a much
lesser degree, in other regions. In MISO, for example, roughly 1% of potential wind energy
output in 2009 was curtailed (MISO 2010). As shown in Figure 31, the national sample-wide
average capacity factor in 2009 with curtailment was 30%. This sample-wide average
capacity factor would have reached 32% if not for the curtailment experienced in ERCOT
and MISO (and slightly higher were one to account for curtailment in other regions 53).
3,000
17% of Potential
Curtailed Wind Generation
Wind Generation
2,500 Actual Wind Generation 8% of Potential Curtailed in 2009
Wind Generation
2,000 Curtailed in 2008
1% of Potential
GWh
500
0
Nov
Nov
Nov
Jan
Jun
Jan
Jun
Jan
Jun
Jul
Jul
Jul
Mar
Apr
Mar
Apr
Mar
Apr
Aug
Sep
Feb
Aug
Sep
Feb
Aug
Sep
Feb
Oct
Oct
Oct
May
Dec
May
Dec
May
Dec
53
Data on curtailment in other regions were not available, but are expected to be relatively modest for 2009.
50%
Sample includes 260 projects totaling 22.37 GW
2009 Capacity Factor (by project vintage)
45%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
Capacity-Weighted Average 2009 Capacity Factor (by project vintage)
5% Individual Project 2009 Capacity Factor (by project vintage)
0%
Pre-1998 1998-99 2000-01 2002-03 2004-05 2006 2007 2008
10 projects 21 projects 28 projects 36 projects 32 projects 24 projects 36 projects 73 projects
674 MW 746 MW 1,571 MW 1,872 MW 2,691 MW 2,180 MW 4,505 MW 8,127 MW
Projects installed since 2005, however, have in general bucked this trend of rising capacity
factors among newer projects: the capacity-weighted average 2009 capacity factors for projects
built in 2006, 2007, and 2008 were 28%, 33%, and 29%, respectively. Though further analysis
would be needed to fully assess the reasons for this leveling of capacity factors, potential
explanations include:
• Project Siting: Developers may be reacting to increasing transmission constraints (or even
just regionally differentiated wholesale electricity prices, or siting constraints) by focusing on
those projects in their pipeline that may not be located in the best wind resource areas, but
that do have ready access to unconstrained transmission (or higher-priced markets or readily
available sites without long permitting times).
54
Although focusing just on 2009 tends to limit the effects of inter-annual fluctuations in the nationwide wind
resource (which do impact the year to year results in Figure 31), it also means that the absolute capacity factors
shown in Figure 33 may not be representative if 2009 was not a representative year in terms of the strength of the
wind resource. Note also that by including only 2009 capacity factors, variations in the quality of the wind resource
year in 2009 across regions could skew the regional results presented in Figure 34 and Table 8.
Trends in fleet-wide average capacity factors aside, the project-level spread shown in Figure 33
is enormous, with 2009 capacity factors ranging from 16.6% to 43.5% among projects built in
the same year, 2008. Some of this spread is attributable to regional variations in wind resource
quality. Figure 34 shows the regional variation in 2009 capacity factors, based on a sub-sample
of wind power projects built from 2004 through 2008 (i.e., a period of relative stability in
capacity factors, as shown in Figure 33). For this sample of projects, weighted-average capacity
factors are the highest in Hawaii (above 40% on average) and the Mountain region (around 35%
on average), and lowest in the East (below 30% on average) and in Texas (around 26% on
average). The relatively low 2009 average capacity factor in Texas is largely caused by
curtailment within ERCOT (see Figure 32): the ERCOT-wide 2009 capacity factor with
curtailment of 25.8% would have been 31.1% were there no curtailment, an absolute difference
of 5.2%. All other regions feature weighted-average capacity factors in 2009 that are in the 30-
35% range, which is similar to the national average among the overall 2004-2008 project sample.
Given the small sample size in some regions, however, as well as the possibility that certain
regions may have experienced a particularly good or bad wind resource year in 2009 or different
levels of wind energy curtailment, care should be taken in extrapolating these results.
50%
Sample includes 165 projects built from 2004-2008 and totaling 17.5 GW
45%
2009 Capacity Factor (by region)
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
Capacity-Weighted Average 2009 Capacity Factor (by region)
10%
Individual Project 2009 Capacity Factor (by region)
5% Capacity-Weighted Average 2009 Capacity Factor (total U.S.)
0%
Texas East Great Lakes Northwest New England California Heartland Mountain Hawaii
30 projects 13 projects 13 projects 16 projects 6 projects 7 projects 65 projects 14 projects 1 project
5,398 MW 1,057 MW 1,446 MW 1,930 MW 73 MW 387 MW 5,650 MW 1,533 MW 30 MW
Figure 34. 2009 Project Capacity Factors by Region: 2004-2008 Projects Only
Sample # MW # MW # MW # MW # MW # MW # MW # MW # MW
Pre-1998 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 8 642 1 26 0 0 0 0
1998-99 0 0 0 0 2 20 1 25 0 0 6 192 10 482 2 27 0 0
2000-01 4 669 6 83 1 30 3 373 0 0 1 67 9 227 4 123 0 0
2002-03 1 160 3 161 1 50 2 105 0 0 4 287 22 600 3 510 0 0
2004-05 4 461 2 349 1 54 5 434 0 0 3 130 15 1,062 2 200 0 0
2006 2 860 1 26 0 0 4 538 2 1 2 188 10 387 2 150 1 30
2007 7 1,135 4 169 5 679 4 654 2 44 0 0 10 1,049 4 776 0 0
2008 17 2,942 6 513 7 712 3 303 2 29 2 69 30 3,152 6 407 0 0
Total 35 6,226 22 1,300 17 1,546 22 2,433 7 79 26 1,575 107 6,985 23 2,192 1 30
Source: Berkeley Lab
Operations and Maintenance Costs Are Affected by the Age and Size of the
Project, Among Other Factors
Operations and maintenance (O&M) costs are a significant component of the overall cost of
wind energy, but can vary substantially among projects. Market data on actual project-level
O&M costs are not widely and readily available. Even where data are available, care must be
taken in extrapolating historical O&M costs given the dramatic changes in wind turbine
technology that have occurred over the last two decades, not least of which has been the up-
scaling of turbine size (see Figures 14 and 15, earlier). Anecdotal evidence suggests that O&M
costs and premature component failures continue to be key challenges to the wind power
industry.
Berkeley Lab has compiled O&M cost data for 115 installed wind power projects in the United
States, totaling 6,097 MW of capacity, with commercial operation dates of 1982 through 2008.
These data cover facilities owned by both independent power producers and utilities, though data
since 2004 are exclusively from utility-owned projects. A full time series of O&M cost data, by
year, is available for only a small number of projects; in all other cases, O&M cost data are
available for just a subset of years of project operations. Although the data sources do not all
clearly define what items are included in O&M costs, in most cases the reported values appear to
include the costs of wages and materials associated with operating and maintaining the facility,
as well as rent (i.e., land lease payments). Other ongoing expenses, including taxes, property
50
(2009 $/MWh)
40
30
20
10
0
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Last Year of Equipment Installation
Source: Berkeley Lab; seven data points suppressed to protect confidentiality
Figure 35. Average O&M Costs for Available Data Years from 2000-2009, by Last Year of
Equipment Installation
Figure 35 shows project-level O&M costs by year of project installation (i.e., the most recent
year that original equipment was installed, or the most recent year of project repowering). Here,
O&M costs represent an average of annual project-level data available for the years 2000
through 2009. For example, for projects that reached commercial operations in 2008, only year
2009 data are available, and that is what is shown in the figure. 55 Many other projects only have
data for a subset of years during the 2000-09 timeframe, either because they were installed after
2000 or because a full time series is not available, so each data point in the chart may represent a
different averaging period over 2000-09. The chart highlights the 27 projects, totaling 2,450
MW, for which 2009 O&M cost data were available.
The data exhibit considerable spread, demonstrating that O&M costs are far from uniform across
projects. However, Figure 35 suggests that projects installed more recently have, on average,
incurred lower O&M costs. Specifically, capacity-weighted average 2000-09 O&M costs for
projects in the sample constructed in the 1980s equal $32/MWh, dropping to $22/MWh for
projects installed in the 1990s, and to $9/MWh for projects installed in the 2000s. This drop in
55
Projects installed in 2009 are not shown because only data from the first full year of project operations (and
afterwards) are used, which in the case of projects installed in 2009 would be year 2010 (for which data are not yet
available).
To help illustrate the possible influence of these two factors, Figure 36 shows annual O&M costs
over time, based on the number of years since the last year of equipment installation. Annual
data for projects of similar vintages are averaged together, and data for projects under 5 MW in
size are excluded (to help control for the confounding influence of economies of scale). Note
that, for each group, the number of projects used to compute the average annual values shown in
the figure is limited, and varies substantially (from 4 to 18 data points per project-year for
projects installed prior to 2000; from 6 to 15 data points per project-year for projects installed in
2000 through 2002; from 2 to 4 data points per project-year for projects installed in 2003 through
2005, and from 3 to 20 data points per project-year for projects installed in 2006 through 2008).
With this limitation in mind, the figure shows that projects installed more recently have had, at
least during their first two years of operation, lower O&M costs than those installed in earlier
years. 57 In addition, pre-2000 projects show an upward trend in project-level O&M costs after
the third year of project operation, though the sample size after year four is quite limited.
40
Average Annual O&M Cost 2000-2009
25 2006-2008
20
15
10
5
n=15
n=20
n=13
n=15
n=15
n=18
n=3
n=4
n=6
n=6
n=3
n=6
n=4
n=7
n=8
n=2
n=3
n=4
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Figure 36. Annual Average O&M Costs, by Project Age and Last Year of Equipment
Installation
56
Many of the projects installed more-recently may still be within their turbine manufacturer warranty period, in
which case the O&M costs reported here may or may not include the costs of the turbine warranty, depending on
whether the warranty is paid up-front as part of the turbine purchase, or is paid over time.
57
Figure 36 shows that, among projects in their third year of commercial operation, the most recent vintage of
projects (i.e., those installed between 2006 and 2008) had the highest average O&M costs. This is the result,
however, of a single project completed in 2006 with particularly high O&M costs in its third year of operation.
60
Last Year of Equipment Installation:
Average Annual O&M Cost 2000-2009
30
20
10
n=3 n=22 n=6 n=2 n=27 n=7 n=4 n=9 n=11 n=4 n=14
0
<5 MW 5-20 MW 20-50 MW >50 MW
Project Size (MW)
Source: Berkeley Lab; averages shown only for groups of two or more projects
Figure 37. Average O&M Costs for Available Data Years from 2000-2008, by Project Size
A variety of policy drivers at both the federal and state levels have been important to the
expansion of the wind power market in the United States At the federal level, perhaps the two
most important policy incentives – at least in recent years – have been the PTC and accelerated
tax depreciation. First established by the Energy Policy Act of 1992, the PTC provides a 10-year
credit at a level that equaled 2.1¢/kWh in 2009 (adjusted annually for inflation), and increases to
2.2¢/kWh in 2010. The historical importance of the PTC to the U.S. wind power industry is
illustrated by the pronounced lulls in wind power capacity additions in the three years (2000,
2002, and 2004) in which the PTC lapsed, as well as the increased development activity often
seen during the year in which the PTC is otherwise scheduled to expire (see Figure 1).
Accelerated tax depreciation, meanwhile, enables project owners to depreciate the vast majority
of their investments over a five- to six-year period for tax purposes. An even-more-attractive
50% “bonus depreciation” schedule was in place during 2009, serving as an incremental driver
of wind capacity additions in that year.
Although these two federal incentives will likely remain important going forward (the PTC is
currently in place through 2012, having been extended as part of the Recovery Act; while
accelerated depreciation has no expiration date), in 2009 the PTC in particular was
overshadowed by the Section 1603 Treasury cash grant program, enacted as part of the Recovery
Act in February 2009. Acknowledging the conspicuous absence of tax equity investors in the
market following the financial crisis of late 2008, Section 1603 of the Recovery Act enables
wind power and other qualifying projects to elect a 30% cash grant in lieu of the PTC or ITC.
Relative to the PTC, the 30% cash grant can provide a significant amount of value to wind power
projects (Bolinger et al. 2010). Not surprisingly, then, the program has been heavily subscribed
by wind power projects, which as of mid-July 2010 had received 88% of the more than $4.78
billion in Section 1603 cash grants awarded since the program’s implementation in late-July
2009. More than 6,400 MW – i.e., more than 64% – of all new wind power capacity installed in
the United States in 2009 chose the grant (Bolinger et al. 2010). The Section 1603 program
should continue to be a strong driver for at least another year – wind power projects must begin
construction by the end of 2010, and be operating by the end of 2012, in order to qualify for the
grant – and several proposals exist to extend the program in some form.
Two other Recovery Act programs also played a (more limited) role in the wind energy sector in
2009. First, Title IV of the Recovery Act expanded a loan guarantee program that was originally
enacted as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. The original program, under Section 1703, is
targeted at projects that manufacture or utilize innovative clean energy technologies. The first
two such guarantees for projects in the wind sector were conditionally awarded in 2009 and early
2010: Nordic Windpower received a $16 million loan guarantee to expand its two-bladed wind
turbine manufacturing facility in Pocatello, Idaho, while developer First Wind received a $117
million loan guarantee for its 30 MW Kahuku wind project (which will include battery storage)
in Hawaii. The Recovery Act also created a sister loan guarantee program, called the Section
Second, to encourage the growth of green manufacturing jobs in the United States, the Recovery
Act created an advanced energy manufacturing tax credit, also known as the Section 48C credit,
which provides a 30% tax credit for investments in new clean energy manufacturing facilities.
More than 500 applications seeking in excess of $8 billion in Section 48C credits were submitted
by the October 2009 deadline, exceeding the $2.3 billion program cap by more than a 3-to-1
margin. In early January 2010, 183 manufacturing projects spread across 43 states received
credit allocations totaling $2.3 billion, with the wind energy sector capturing more than 10% of
this total. Recipients are under no obligation to proceed with their projects, but in order to
realize the credit, they must commission their facilities by February 2013. The Obama
administration is seeking to extend the program for another year, with an additional $5 billion
(Office of the Press Secretary, 2010).
In addition to the tax benefits and Recovery Act programs discussed above, a number of other
federal policies have also helped to support different segments of the wind power industry in
recent years. For example, because tax-exempt entities are unable to take direct advantage of tax
incentives, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 created the Clean Renewable Energy Bond (CREB)
program, authorizing $800 million of what is effectively interest-free debt (though not without
certain additional transaction costs) to eligible renewable projects. 58 Another $400 million of
“old CREBs” were authorized in late 2006, followed by $2.4 billion in “new CREBs” authorized
by the Extension Act of 2008 ($800 million) and Recovery Act of 2009 ($1.6 billion). This
old/new distinction is pertinent because “new CREBs” must follow a different set of rules –
largely aimed at increasing the bonds’ effectiveness – than existed under the “old CREBs.”
Applications for the $2.4 billion in “new CREBs” were due in early August 2009, and in late
October, $2.2 billion in CREB allocations were awarded, with more than $450 million going to
wind power projects. 59
Finally, since 2003 the federal government has offered financial assistance to wind power (and
other types of) projects that are located in rural areas. Specifically, Section 9006 of Title IX of
The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 established The Renewable Energy Systems
and Energy Efficiency Improvements Program (the Section 9006 program). Administered by the
USDA, the Section 9006 program provided grants and loan guarantees to farmers, ranchers, and
rural small businesses for assistance with purchasing renewable energy systems and making
energy efficiency improvements. In May 2008, the Section 9006 program was converted to the
Rural Energy for America Program (the REAP) by The Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of
2008. The REAP is little changed from the Section 9006 program – i.e., the REAP still targets
agricultural producers and rural small businesses (including special purpose project companies
set up specifically to own wind power projects) with grants and loan guarantees to encourage the
58
Such entities have also been eligible to receive the Renewable Energy Production Incentive, which nominally
offers a 10-year cash payment equal in face value to the PTC, but the need for annual appropriations and insufficient
funding under those appropriations has limited the availability of these payments and therefore also the effectiveness
of the program.
59
The $800 million portion of the $2.4 billion authorization that was reserved for rural electric cooperatives was
undersubscribed by $200 million, which is why only $2.2 billion was allocated.
State Policies Play a Significant Role in Directing the Location and Amount
of Wind Power Development
State policies continue to play a substantial role in directing the location and amount of wind
power development. From 1999 through 2009, for example, 61% of the wind power capacity
built in the United States was located in states with RPS policies; in 2009, this proportion was
57%. One new state (Kansas) established a mandatory RPS program in 2009, bringing the total
to 29 states and Washington D.C. (see Figure 38); a number of additional states strengthened
previously established RPS programs in 2009. In aggregate, existing state RPS policies would
require roughly 73 GW of new renewable capacity by 2025, representing roughly 6% of total
U.S. retail electricity sales in that year and 30% of projected load growth between 2000 and
2025.
Figure 38. State RPS Policies and Non-Binding Renewable Energy Goals (as of July
2010)
Utility resource planning requirements in Western and Midwestern states have also helped spur
wind power additions in recent years (especially as the prospect of future carbon regulations has
been included as a variable in resource selection), as has growing voluntary customer demand for
“green” power, especially among commercial customers. State renewable energy funds provide
Transmission development appears to be gaining some traction. The North American Electric
Reliability Corporation (NERC), for example, projects that transmission (100 kV and above) in
the United States will increase by 31,400 circuit-miles, or about 8%, by 2018 (NERC 2009a),
while the Brattle Group projects that annual transmission investment will exceed $10 billion
going forward, compared to roughly $2 billion per year in the mid-1990s (Pfeifenberger et al.
2009).
With regards to transmission, several decisions at the federal level in 2009 created some concern
among the wind power industry:
• The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that FERC could use its backstop siting authority if a state
withheld its decision for more than a year, but that it did not have the authority to override a
state’s decision to deny a transmission permit application (U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals 2009).
• The U.S. Court of Appeals remanded back to FERC the Commission’s decision to approve
spreading the costs of new transmission facilities above 500-kV in PJM to all transmission
customers. Ruling that FERC had to better document how all transmission customers would
benefit from the new transmission if all had to share in the cost, the Court’s decision added
some uncertainty to cost allocation policy (U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals 2009).
• FERC conditionally approved the Midwest ISO’s petition to revise its pre-existing 50-50 cost
share methodology to instead charge interconnecting generators 90% of the costs for
transmission facilities rated 345 kV and above, and 100% for transmission facilities below
345 kV, though FERC also directed the Midwest ISO to file a revised cost allocation
methodology by July 15, 2010 (FERC 2009). This policy contrasts with FERC’s previous
approval in 2007 of a California ISO proposal in which the cost of transmission for location-
constrained resources would, initially, be covered in an ISO access charge (FERC 2007a).
States, grid operators, regional organizations, and DOE also continue to take proactive steps to
encourage transmission investment to improve access to renewable resources. A non-exhaustive
list of examples of these initiatives is presented below:
A variety of efforts to proactively plan for transmission, often through analyses of state and
regional renewable energy zones, also continued in 2009. 60 Finally, progress was made in 2009
on some of the transmission projects that are designed, in part, to support wind power, including:
• California Tehachapi: The first three segments of the Tehachapi transmission project were
completed in May 2010. Meanwhile, the California PUC approved segments 4-11 in
December 2009. Once fully operational, the Tehachapi transmission expansion is expected
to be able to accommodate about 4,000 MW of wind power (SCE 2010).
• Texas NextEra Transmission: NextEra built a 200+mile 345-kV line to capture the higher
wholesale prices that exist outside of West Texas, where most of wind power capacity is
located. The line can transmit up to 950 MW and runs southeast from two of NextEra’s wind
power projects near Abilene (FPL 2009).
• Maine Transmission: In May 2010, the Maine PUC approved a $1.4 billion proposal for a
350-mile transmission line that could provide Maine wind power projects greater access to
southern New England markets (CMP 2010).
Integrating Wind Energy into Power Systems Is Manageable, but Not Free
of Costs, and Market Operators Are Implementing Methods to
Accommodate Increased Penetration
During the past several years, there has been a considerable amount of attention paid to the
potential impacts of wind energy on power systems. Concerns about, and solutions to, these
issues have affected, and continue to impact, the pace of wind power deployment in the United
States
Studies that have evaluated the operational impacts of wind energy on the power system have
become increasingly sophisticated, resulting in a better accounting of the potential impacts and
integration costs of increased wind energy penetration levels. Key trends among some of the
more-recent studies include evaluating even higher levels of wind energy penetration, evaluating
the integration of wind energy within larger electricity market areas, and identifying approaches
to mitigate integration concerns. Additional recent high-level summaries and examples of wind
energy integration in the United States and in other countries are available from IEEE (2009).
60
For example, Xcel Energy submitted a resource zone and transmission plan to the Colorado Public Utilities
Commission outlining five wind and solar resource zones, three transmission projects currently being implemented,
and six potential transmission projects that would greatly increase renewable energy transfer capability from the
zones. The Western Renewable Energy Zones initiative, a collaborative between the Western Governors’
Association and the U.S. Department of Energy, completed its Phase 1 report in June 2009. During Phase 1, the
project developed a methodology to identify and characterize specific renewable resource-rich areas and created a
modeling tool to evaluate the relative economic costs of delivering the renewable energy from the zones to load
centers. Arizona’s three largest utilities, meanwhile, filed proposals with the Arizona Corporation Commission to
build three renewable-oriented transmission projects each. A variety of other state-level renewable energy zone
analyses also continued in 2009.
In addition to these two studies at the interconnection level, Table 9 provides a selective listing
of results from wind energy integration cost studies 62,63 completed from 2003 through early
2010. 64 Similar information is presented in Figure 39 at various levels of wind power capacity
penetration. Because methods vary and a consistent set of operational impacts has not been
included in each study, results from the different analyses are not fully comparable. Note also
that the rigor with which the various studies have been conducted varies, as does the degree of
61
Wind penetration on a capacity basis (defined as nameplate wind power capacity serving a region divided by that
region’s peak electricity demand) was frequently used in earlier integration studies. For a given amount of wind
power capacity, penetration on a capacity basis is typically higher than the comparable wind penetration in energy
terms (because, over the course of a year, wind power projects generally operate at a lower percentage of their rated
capacity, on average, than do many other resources). The energy penetration levels in the EWITS study correspond
to 48% wind on a capacity basis. The energy penetration levels in the WWSIS study correspond to penetrations of
52% wind and 10% solar in the WestConnect and 38% wind and 6% solar in the rest of the Western Electricity
Coordinating Council on a capacity basis.
62
The integration costs considered in these studies typically refer to the costs associated with accommodating the
variability and uncertainty associated with wind energy. Generally, these costs are associated with three different
time frames: regulation – from seconds to a few minutes; load-following – tens of minutes to a few hours; and unit
commitment – out to the next day or two. Studies often, but not always, estimate these costs as the difference in
overall electric system production costs between a scenario that captures the variability and unpredictability of wind
energy and a scenario with an energy-equivalent block of power having no variability or uncertainty.
63
Several additional studies focus on the operational impacts of wind energy and/or on the overall production-cost
reduction value of wind energy, without an explicit comparison to an energy-equivalent block of power having no
variability or uncertainty. These studies are not included in the table because they do not seek to explicitly calculate
integration costs. Examples of such studies include: the Western Wind and Solar Integration Study, (GE 2010); a
2010 study of wind energy integration into the Southwest Power Pool (Charles River Associates 2010); a 2008 study
on the ancillary service implications of high wind energy penetration in ERCOT (GE 2008); two integration studies
for California from 2007 by the California ISO (CAISO 2007) and by the California Energy Commission’s
Intermittency Analysis Project (Piwko et al. 2007); and a study for New York in 2005 (GE 2005).
64
Some of the studies included in the table also address capacity valuation for resource adequacy purposes; those
results are not presented here.
• Wind energy integration costs are below $10/MWh – and often below $5/MWh – for wind
power capacity penetrations up to or exceeding 40% of the peak load of the system in which
the wind power is delivered. 65 Variations in estimated costs across studies are due, in part, to
differences in methodologies, definitions of integration costs, power system and market
characteristics, wind energy penetration levels, and fuel price assumptions.
• Regulation impacts are often found to be relatively small, whereas the impacts of wind
energy on load-following and unit commitment are typically found to be more significant.
• Larger balancing areas, such as those found in RTOs and ISOs, make it possible to integrate
wind energy more easily and at lower cost than is the case in smaller balancing areas.
• The successful use of wind power forecasts by system operators can significantly reduce
integration challenges and costs. Wind forecasts are most accurate and effective when
aggregated across large, electrically interconnected areas.
• Intra-hour scheduling (e.g., 5-10 minute schedules) provides access to flexibility in
conventional power plants that lowers the costs of integrating wind energy.
• Wind energy integration costs tend to rise with increasing natural gas prices, though the
economic value of wind energy also increases with higher gas prices.
65
The relatively low cost estimates in the 2006 Minnesota study and the 2010 Nebraska study, despite aggressive
levels of wind energy penetration, are partly a result of relying on the broader regional electricity market to
accommodate certain elements of integrating wind energy into system operations. Conversely, the higher
integration costs found by Avista and Idaho Power are, in part, caused by the relatively smaller markets in which the
wind energy is being absorbed and by those utilities’ operating practices. Specifically, the Northwest currently uses
hourly scheduling intervals rather than the sub-hourly markets common in ISOs and RTOs. A sensitivity case in the
Avista Utilities study demonstrates that the use of a 10-minute transaction scheduling interval would decrease the
cost of integrating wind energy by 40-60%.
66
Two estimates of integration costs from 2009 are not included in this table due to ongoing efforts to refine the
methodologies and/or incomplete documentation those methodologies. The first study, from PacifiCorp, estimated
integration cost to be $11.85/MWh at a 22% wind power capacity penetration level, assuming a $45/ton CO2 tax.
With a lower CO2 tax of $8/ton, estimated integration costs decreases to $9.96/MWh (PacifiCorp 2009). The
second study, from Portland General Electric, estimated integration costs to be $11.75/MWh at a 27% wind power
capacity penetration level (PGE 2009). If and when refined estimates and more complete documentation of study
methodologies become available, these results will be included in the main body of this report..
$9 Avista Utilities
BPA
$8 California RPS
Xcel-PSCo-2008 at
2006 Gas Prices
EWITS
$7
Integration Cost ($/MWh)
Idaho Power
$6 MN-MISO
Nebraska
$5
Pacificorp-2004
$4 Pacificorp-2007
Nebraska with Additional Cost of
Hourly Wind to Energy-equivalent Puget Sound Energy
$3
Daily Flat Block of Power We Energies
$2 Xcel-MNDOC
Xcel-PSCo-2006
$1
Xcel-PSCo-2008
$0 Xcel-UWIG
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
Figure 39. Integration Costs at Various Levels of Wind Power Capacity Penetration
Many ISOs and utilities are also continuing to take important steps to mitigate the challenges
faced with integrating larger quantities of wind energy. Centralized wind forecasting systems are
currently in place at the PJM, Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Midwest ISO, New York
ISO, California ISO, Southern California Edison, and Xcel Energy; while the BPA is currently
developing wind forecasting systems (Porter and Rogers 2010). Northern Tier Transmission
Group, Columbia Grid, and WestConnect, meanwhile, are jointly investigating projects that will
increase power system flexibility, including the creation of a dynamic scheduling
communications infrastructure, sharing of area control errors, and intra-hour scheduling and
balancing. These initiatives have broad benefits, including better utilization of the transmission
system and providing increased flexibility to integrate wind energy.
Some utilities are now directly charging wind power projects for balancing services or are
reducing posted ‘avoided cost’ contract price payments to account for the costs of integrating
wind energy. BPA, for example, includes a wind energy balancing charge in its transmission
tariff equivalent to about $5.70/MWh. FERC conditionally approved a higher generator
regulation and frequency response services charge for wind energy in the Westar Energy
balancing area equivalent to about $0.80/MWh; this tariff is still in FERC proceedings and may
be revised (FERC 2010a). Idaho Power, Avista, and PacifiCorp, meanwhile, all discount their
avoided cost payments for qualifying wind power projects by an integration rate that ranges from
7-9% of the avoided cost rate, up to $6.50/MWh (IPUC 2010).
At a national level, NERC and FERC have also been focused on identifying methods to reliably
and economically integrate wind energy into the bulk power system. NERC released a
A variety of forecasts suggest that wind power installations in 2010 may fall within the range of
5,500 MW to 8,000 MW, a drop of 20-45% compared to the nearly 10,000 MW installed in 2009
(see Table 10). This contraction is reflected in results for the first half of 2010, in which just
1,240 MW of wind power were installed – i.e., 57% less than the amount installed in the first
half of 2008, and 71% below the pace set in the first half of 2009 (AWEA 2010c). After a
slower year in 2010, these predictions show market resurgence in 2011 and 2012, with annual
installations ranging from 8,100 to 15,000 MW depending on the forecast and year. From 2010
through 2012, these forecasts predict cumulative wind power additions of 24 to 33 GW; this
amount of new wind power capacity would provide roughly 30-40% of EIA’s projected growth
in total U.S. electricity demand over the 2010-2012 timeframe. Though not shown in Table 10,
any projections beyond 2012 are rendered considerably less certain by the scheduled expiration
of a number of policies at the end of that year, including the PTC, the ability to elect a 30% ITC
in lieu of the PTC, and the ability to receive the 30% cash grant for projects that initiated
construction by the end of 2010.
Table 10. Forecasts for Annual U.S. Wind Capacity Additions (MW)
Cumulative Additions
Source 2010 2011 2012
2010-2012
EIA 7,310 10,200 10,330 27,840
BTM 8,000 10,000 15,000 33,000
IHS EER 7,130 9,830 9,340 26,300
Bloomberg NEF 7,390 8,535 8,610 24,535
Macquarie 7,500 8,100 8,700 24,300
UBS 6,950 9,380 10,780 27,110
AWEA 5,500-7,500 -- -- --
Source: Bloomberg NEF (2010b), BTM (2010), EIA (2010), IHS Emerging Energy Research (2010), Macquarie (2010), UBS (2010),
AWEA (2010c)
Notwithstanding the anticipated slowdown in 2010, these growth projections would likely ensure
that the United States retains its 2009 position as the second-largest wind energy market in the
world in terms of annual capacity additions. Driven by rapidly growing energy demands and
Uncertainties about market performance even over the 2010-2012 timeframe are the result of
underlying uncertainties about market and policy drivers. On the positive side, the wind power
industry now has stronger federal policy support than at any time in the last decade, and state
policies have become more aggressive. Additionally there are prospects for further federal
policy support through some combination of a continuation of (or variants to) the Treasury Grant
program, federal RPS legislation, climate legislation, and policies intended to spur new
transmission investments, as well as continued state renewable energy and climate policy
initiatives. With wind turbine prices now dropping, the trend of increasing project-level costs
and prices experienced over the last several years is also expected to slow and even reverse,
improving the comparative economic position of wind.
On the other hand, with the window of eligibility for the Treasury Grant program scheduled to
close at the end of 2010 and the tax equity market for wind energy not fully recovered, near-term
growth may be hampered. Natural gas prices and near-term price expectations have plummeted,
making wind energy’s primary competitor more economically attractive than in recent years.
And, with the much-lower wholesale electricity price environment, merchant wind power
development – which had grown dramatically in recent years – may slow. The significant wind
energy growth in recent years has also exceeded aggregate state RPS demands, resulting in softer
demand from state RPS markets in the near term. Wind power additions are increasingly
constrained by inadequate transmission infrastructure, and while progress is being made to
alleviate those constraints, the build-out of transmission infrastructure will take time. Finally, in
California and the Southwest in particular, wind energy is beginning to face stiff competition
with solar energy in meeting state renewable energy requirements.
Regardless of these competing trends, wind power capacity additions over the past several years,
and those projected from 2010-2012, put the United States on a trajectory that may lead to 20%
of the nation’s electricity demand coming from wind energy by 2030. In May 2008, the U.S.
Department of Energy, in collaboration with its national laboratories, the wind power industry,
and others, published a report that analyzed the technical and economic feasibility of achieving
20% wind energy penetration by 2030 (DOE 2008). In addition to finding no insurmountable
barriers to reaching 20% wind energy penetration, the report also laid out a potential wind power
deployment path that started at 3.3 GW/year in 2007, increasing to 4.2 GW/year by 2009, 6.4
GW/year by 2011, 9.6 GW/year by 2013, 13.4 GW/year by 2015, and roughly 16 GW/year by
2017 and thereafter, yielding cumulative wind power capacity of 305 GW by 2030. Historical
growth over the last four years puts the United States on a trajectory exceeding this deployment
18 315
range of annual projections
16 280
14 245
12 210
10 175
8 140
6 105
0 0
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
Source: DOE (20% wind scenario); AWEA (historical additions); Table 10 (projected additions)
Figure 40. Wind Power Capacity Growth: 20% Wind Report, Actual Installations,
Projected Growth
Ramping up to an annual installation rate of 16 GW per year, and maintaining that rate for a
decade, is, however, far from pre-determined. The record 10 GW installation pace in 2009 was
achieved, in part, because of the previously-pending end-of-2008 expiration of the PTC.
Moreover, federal policy towards wind energy remains uncertain after 2012. Whether the
roughly 16 GW per year pace needed for wind power to contribute 20% of the nation’s
electricity by 2030 can be achieved and maintained remains to be seen.
In addition to stable, long-term promotional policies, the DOE (2008) report suggests four other
areas where supportive actions may be needed in order to reach such annual installation rates.
First, the nation will need to invest in significant amounts of new transmission infrastructure
designed to access remote wind resources. Second, to more-effectively integrate wind power
into electricity markets, larger power control regions, better wind forecasting, and increased
investment in fast-responding generating plants will be required. Third, streamlined siting and
permitting procedures will need to be established to allow wind power developers to identify
appropriate project locations and move from wind resource prospecting to construction quickly.
Finally, enhanced research and development efforts in both the public and private sector will be
required to lower the cost of offshore wind power, and incrementally improve conventional land-
based wind energy technology.
Global cumulative (and 2009 annual) wind power capacity data come from BTM (2010), but are
revised to include the U.S. wind power capacity used in the present report. Historical cumulative
and annual worldwide capacity data come from BTM Consult and the Earth Policy Institute.
Wind energy as a percentage of country-specific electricity consumption is based on end-of-2009
(and end-of-2006/07/08) wind power capacity data and country-specific assumed capacity
factors that primarily come from BTM (2010). For the United States, the performance data
presented in this report are used to estimate wind energy production. Country-specific projected
wind generation is then divided by projected electricity consumption in 2010 (and 2007/08/09),
based on actual 2007 consumption and a country-specific growth rate assumed to be the same as
the rate of growth from 2002 through 2007 (these data come from EIA).
The wind power project installation map was created by NREL, based in part on AWEA’s
database of projects and in part on data from Platts on the location of individual projects. Effort
was taken to reconcile the AWEA project database and the Platts-provided project locations,
though some discrepancies remain. Wind energy as a percentage contribution to statewide
electricity generation is based on AWEA installed capacity data for the end of 2009 and the
underlying wind power project performance data presented in this report. Where necessary,
judgment was used to estimate state-specific capacity factors. The resulting state wind
generation is then divided by in-state total electricity generation in 2009, based on EIA data.
The listing of wind power capacity serving specific electric utilities comes from AWEA’s U.S.
Wind Industry Annual Market Report (AWEA 2010a), with two exceptions: (1) the Empire
District Electric Company was added to AWEA’s “top twenty” investor-owned utility list at
position number 14; and (2) Minnkota Power Cooperative’s wind capacity was corrected to 357
MW (AWEA (2010a) shows 290 MW). To translate this capacity to projected utility-specific
annual electricity generation, regionally appropriate wind power capacity factors are used. The
resulting utility-specific projected wind generation is then divided by the aggregate national
retail sales of each utility in 2008 (based on EIA Form-861 data). Only utilities with 100 MW or
more of wind power capacity are included in these calculations. In the case of G&T
cooperatives and power authorities that provide power to other cooperatives and municipal
utilities (but do not directly serve load themselves), this report uses 2008 retail sales from the
electric utilities served by those G&T cooperatives and power authorities. In some cases, these
individual utilities may be buying additional wind directly from other projects, or may be served
Data on wind power capacity in various interconnection queues come from a review of publicly
available data provided by each ISO, RTO, or utility. Only projects that were active in the queue
at the end of 2009, but that had not yet been built, are included. Suspended projects are not
included in these listings. Data on projects that are in the nearer-term development pipeline come
from Ventyx (2010).
Industry Trends
Turbine manufacturer market share, average turbine size, and average project size are derived
from the AWEA wind power project database, with some processing by Berkeley Lab.
Information on turbine hub heights and rotor diameters were compiled by Berkeley Lab based on
information provided by turbine manufacturers, standard turbine specifications, FAA data, web
searches, and other sources.
Information on wind turbine and component manufacturing come from NREL, AWEA, and
Berkeley Lab, based on a review of press reports, personal communications, and other sources.
The listings of manufacturing and supply chain facilities are not intended to be exhaustive. Data
on aggregate U.S. imports and exports of wind power equipment come primarily from the U.S.
International Trade Commission, and can be obtained from the USITC’s DataWeb
(http://dataweb.usitc.gov/).
Information on wind power developer consolidation and financing trends were compiled by
Berkeley Lab. Wind project ownership and power purchaser trends are based on a Berkeley Lab
analysis of the AWEA project database.
Berkeley Lab used a variety of public and some private sources of data to compile capital cost
data for a large number of U.S. wind power projects. Data sources range from pre-installation
corporate press releases to verified post-construction cost data. Specific sources of data include:
EIA Form 412, FERC Form 1, various Securities and Exchange Commission filings, various
filings with state public utilities commissions, Windpower Monthly magazine, AWEA’s Wind
Energy Weekly, DOE/EPRI’s Turbine Verification Program, Project Finance magazine, various
analytic case studies, and general web searches for news stories, presentations, or information
from project developers. For 2009 projects, data from the Section 1603 Treasury Grant program
were used extensively. Some data points are suppressed in the figures to protect data
Wind turbine transaction prices were compiled by Berkeley Lab. Sources of transaction price
data vary, but most derive from press releases and press reports. In part because wind turbine
transactions vary in the services offered, a good deal of intra-year variability in the cost data is
apparent. Additionally, the data do not adequately capture the rumored softening of the wind
turbine market since late 2008, as relative few publicly reported wind turbine sales transactions
exist since that time.
Wind power project performance data are compiled overwhelmingly from two main sources:
FERC’s Electronic Quarterly Reports and EIA Form 923. Additional data come from FERC
Form 1 filings and, in several instances, other sources. Where discrepancies exist among the
data sources, those discrepancies are handled based on the judgment of Berkeley Lab staff. Data
on curtailment in Texas are from ERCOT and in the Midwest from MISO.
Wind project operations and maintenance costs come primarily from two sources: EIA Form
412 data from 2001-2003 for private power projects and projects owned by POUs, and FERC
Form 1 data for IOU-owned projects. Some data points are suppressed in the figures to protect
data confidentiality.
Future Outlook
This section was written by staff at Berkeley Lab, based largely on publicly available
information.
Acker, T. 2007. Arizona Public Service Wind Integration Cost Impact Study. Prepared for
Arizona Public Service Company. Flagstaff, Arizona: Northern Arizona University.
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). 2010a. U.S. Wind Industry Annual Market
Report: Year Ending 2009. Washington, DC: American Wind Energy Association.
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). 2010b. AWEA Small Wind Turbine Global
Market Survey, Year Ending 2009. Washington, DC: American Wind Energy Association.
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). 2010c. AWEA Mid-Year 2010 Market Report.
Washington, DC: American Wind Energy Association.
Bailey, D. 2010. “Wind developers shun US federal loan programme.” Windpower Monthly.
26(4): 32-34.
Bloomberg New Energy Finance. 2010a. Q1 Wind Market Outlook. February 2010. Bloomberg
New Energy Finance.
Bloomberg New Energy Finance. 2010b. Q2 Wind Market Outlook. June 2010. Bloomberg New
Energy Finance.
Bolinger, M., R. Wiser, N. Darghouth. 2010. Preliminary Evaluation of the Impact of the Section
1603 Treasury Grant Program on Renewable Energy Deployment in 2009. LBNL-3188E.
Berkeley, California: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
BPA. 2009a. Summary of Eligible TSRs for 2009 Network Open Season. July 22, 2009.
http://www.transmission.bpa.gov/customer_forums/open_season_2009/NOS_Eligibility_su
mmary_07-22-09.pdf
BPA. 2009b. McNary-John Day 500-kilovolt Transmission Line. September 9, 2009.
http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/RecoveryAct/mcnary-johnday.cfm
Brooks, D., E. Lo, R. Zavadil, S. Santoso, J. Smith. 2003. Characterizing the Impact of
Significant Wind Generation Facilities on Bulk Power System Operations Planning: Xcel
Energy – North Case Study. Prepared for the Utility Wind Integration Group. Arlington,
Virginia: Electrotek Concepts.
BTM Consult. 2010. International Wind Energy Development: World Market Update 2009.
Ringkobing, Denmark: BTM Consult ApS.
California ISO (CAISO). 2007. Integration of Renewable Resources. Folsom, California:
California Independent System Operator.
Chadbourne & Parke. 2010a. “Update: Tax Equity Market.” Project Finance Newswire. April
2010. pp. 8-20.
Chadbourne & Parke. 2010b. “The Search for Lowest Cost Capital.” Project Finance Newswire.
July 2010. pp. 1-9.
Charles River Associates. 2010. SPP WITF Wind Integration Study. Little Rock, Arkansas:
Southwest Power Pool.
On the Cover
The 63-MW Dry Lake Wind Power Project installed in Arizona in 2009
is the state’s first utility-scale wind power project.
Credit: Klaus Obel, NREL
PIX 16702
Prepared by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) For more information contact:
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