OneWorld.net's take: The "explosive" growth of wind, solar, and geothermal energy in the United States -- Texas will soon satisfy all its residential energy needs with wind power -- means increased energy security, stabilized energy prices, and thousands of new jobs, writes environmental expert Lester Brown.
Thirty states in the United States now have commercial-scale wind farms. © Taylor Dundee (Flickr)Increased economic investment in clean energy sources is not only good for the environment, but it is also beneficial to the U.S. economy and work force. "By investing $100 billion in the green economy, we can create 2 million good jobs in the next two years," reports John Podesta, president of the Center for American Progress (CAP), a Washington, DC-based think tank.
Despite the transition away from limited and 'dirty' resources like oil and fossil fuels, environmental groups are still advocating for curtailed energy expenditure. Replacing incandescent lightbulbs with compact fluorescent lightbulbs would not only cut greenhouse gas emissions, but would also reduce lighting energy demand by nearly 40 percent, states the Worldwatch Institute. "By 2030, these savings would add up to 16.6 billion tons of carbon dioxide -- more than twice the amount released in the United States every year," adds the environmental think tank.
From: Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown
As
fossil fuel prices rise, as oil insecurity deepens, and as concerns
about climate change cast a shadow over the future of coal, a new
energy economy is emerging in the United States. The old energy
economy, fueled by oil, coal, and natural gas, is being replaced by one
powered by wind, solar, and geothermal energy. The transition is moving
at a pace and on a scale that we could not have imagined even a year
ago.
Consider Texas. Long the leading oil-producing state, it is now also
the leading generator of electricity from wind, having overtaken
California two years ago. Texas now has nearly 6,000 megawatts of
wind-generating capacity online and a staggering 39,000 megawatts in
the construction and planning stages. When all this is completed, Texas
will have 45,000 megawatts of wind-generating capacity (think 45
coal-fired power plants). This will more than satisfy the residential
needs of the state’s 24 million people, enabling Texas to feed
electricity to nearby states such as Louisiana and Mississippi.
After Texas and California, the other leaders among the 30 states with
commercial-scale wind farms are Iowa, Minnesota, Washington, and
Colorado. And other states are emerging as wind superpowers. Clipper
Windpower and BP are teaming up to build the 5,050-megawatt Titan wind
farm, the world’s largest, in eastern South Dakota. Already under
development, Titan will generate five times as much electricity as the
state’s 780,000 residents currently use. This project includes building
a transmission line along an abandoned rail line across Iowa, feeding
electricity into Illinois and the country’s industrial heartland.
Colorado billionaire Philip Anschutz is developing a 2,000-megawatt
wind farm in south central Wyoming. He already has secured the rights
to build a 900-mile high-voltage transmission line to California. With
this investment, the door will be opened to developing scores of huge
wind farms in Wyoming, a wind-rich state with few people. Another
transmission line under development will run north-south, linking
eastern Wyoming’s wind resources with the fast-growing Colorado cities
of Fort Collins, Denver, and Colorado Springs. Wind-rich Kansas and
Oklahoma are looking to build a transmission line to the U.S. Southeast
to export their wealth of cheap wind energy.
California is developing a 4,500-megawatt wind farm complex in the
Tehachapi Mountains northwest of Los Angeles. In the east, Maine—a wind
energy newcomer—is planning to develop 3,000 megawatts of
wind-generating capacity, far more than the state’s 1.3 million
residents need. Further south, Delaware is planning an offshore wind
farm of up to 600 megawatts, which could satisfy half of the state’s
residential electricity needs. New York State, which has 700 megawatts
of wind-generating capacity, plans to add another 8,000 megawatts, with
most of the power being generated by winds coming off Lake Erie and
Lake Ontario. And soon Oregon will nearly double its wind generating
capacity with a 900-megawatt wind farm in the wind-rich Columbia River
Gorge.
Wind appears destined to become the centerpiece of the new U.S. energy
economy, eventually supplying several hundred thousand megawatts of
electricity.
Solar power is also expanding at a breakneck pace. The nation’s wealth
of solar energy is being harnessed by using both photovoltaic cells and
solar thermal power plants to convert sunlight into electricity. For
solar cell installations, California, with its Million Solar Roofs
plan, is far and away the leader. New Jersey is also moving fast,
followed by Nevada.
The largest U.S. solar cell installation today is a 14-megawatt array
at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, but photovoltaic electricity at the
commercial level is about to go big time. PG&E has entered into two
solar cell power contracts with a combined capacity of 800 megawatts.
Together, these plants will cover 12 square miles of desert with solar
cells and will have a peak output comparable to that of a large
coal-fired power plant. Solar power plants are appealing in hot
climates because their highest output coincides with the peak demand
for air conditioning.
Solar thermal plants that use mirrors to concentrate sunlight on a
vessel containing a fluid—heating it to 750 degrees Fahrenheit to
generate steam and produce power—have suddenly become an enormously
attractive technology. The United States has the world’s only large
solar thermal complex, a 350-megawatt project completed in 1991. But as
of September 2008 there are 10 large solar thermal power plants under
construction or in development in the United States, ranging in size
from 180 megawatts to 550 megawatts. Eight of the plants will be built
in California, one in Arizona, and one in Florida. Within the next
three years, the United States will likely go from 420 megawatts of
solar thermal generating capacity to close to 3,500 megawatts—an
eightfold jump.
Along with wind and solar, geothermal energy is also developing at an
explosive rate. As of 2008 the United States has nearly 3,000 megawatts
of geothermal generating capacity, 2,500 of which are in California.
Suddenly this too is changing. Some 96 geothermal power plants now
under development in twelve western states are expected to double U.S.
geothermal generating capacity. With California, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho,
and Utah leading the way, the stage is set for the massive future
development of geothermal energy. (See data).
The new energy economy will be powered largely by electricity from
renewable sources. Electricity will light, heat, and cool buildings. As
we shift to plug-in hybrid cars, light rail transit systems in cities,
and high-speed electric intercity rail systems like those in Japan and
Europe, our transport system will also be powered largely by
electricity.
It is historically rare for so many interests to converge at one time
and in one place as those now supporting the development of renewable
energy resources in the United States. To begin with, shifting to
renewables increases energy security simply because no one can cut off
the supply of wind, solar, or geothermal energy. It also avoids the
price volatility that has plagued oil and natural gas in recent
decades. Once a wind farm or a solar thermal power plant is built, the
price is stable since there is no fuel cost. Turning to renewables will
also dramatically cut carbon emissions, moving us toward climate
stability and thus avoiding the most dangerous effects of climate
change.
The shift also will staunch the outflow of dollars for oil, keeping
that capital at home to invest in the new energy economy, developing
national renewable energy resources and creating jobs here. At a time
of economic turmoil and rising joblessness, these new industries can
generate thousands of new jobs each week. Not only are the wind, solar,
and geothermal industries hiring new workers, they are also generating
jobs in construction and in basic supply industries such as steel,
aluminum, and silicon manufacturing. To build and operate the new
energy economy will require huge numbers of electricians, plumbers, and
roofers. It will also employ countless numbers of high-tech
professionals such as wind meteorologists, geothermal geologists, and
solar engineers.
To ensure that this shift to renewables continues at a rapid rate,
national leadership is needed in one key area—building a strong
national grid. Although private investors are investing in
long-distance high-voltage transmission lines, these need to be
incorporated into a carefully planned national grid, the electrical
equivalent of President Eisenhower’s interstate highway system, in
order to unleash the full potential of renewable energy wealth.
And, finally, this energy transition is being driven by an intense
excitement from the realization that people are now tapping energy
sources that can last as long as the earth itself. Oil wells go dry and
coal seams run out, but for the first time since the industrial
revolution we are investing in energy sources that can last forever.
This new energy economy can be our legacy to the next generation.
Comments
This is wonderful news, it
This is wonderful news, it is nice to know that somthing good can happen after all of the turmoil that has been going on, and is yet to come. But, the possibilities are endless and makes the future more hopeful. Kudos.