U.S. added 419 megawatts of wind power capacity in the third quarter

The U.S. added 419 megawatts of wind power capacity in the third quarter, as installations in the first nine months surpassed all of last year, the American Wind Energy Association said.

More than 20 percent of the nation’s existing 62,300 megawatts are in Texas, which had the largest rate of installations during the third quarter.

Nineteen projects have added 1,254 megawatts this year, up from 1,088 megawatts in 2013, the Washington-based industry association said in a report today. The rate of growth in wind development has slowed in recent years as a federal credit has been allowed to repeatedly lapse by lawmakers. The tax was renewed by Congress last year and has expired again.

“We’re optimistic and fighting quite hard to make sure there’s another extension,” Emily Williams, senior policy analyst for AWEA, said in an interview today at the organization’s annual finance seminar in New York.

 

Driven by record low costs and high demand from power purchasers, the U.S. wind industry was at its busiest ever in the third quarter while completing the record number of wind projects that were under construction at the start of the quarter.

So far, 19 wind projects have been completed in America this year, with as much wind generating capacity as in all of 2013, according to Third Quarter results released today. The American Wind Energy Association expects a strong finish to the year and stepped-up installations in 2015, CEO Tom Kiernan said Monday at the industry’s annual gathering for Wall Street investors at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York.

Kiernan said he is optimistic that Congress will continue the success story of the renewable energy Production Tax Credit, which has created a domestic wind industry supply chain with more than 500 factories in 43 states, by extending it after the election,

“The American wind industry responded to the extension of the Production Tax Credit in 2013 by setting new records for the number of new wind farms under construction and reaching the lowest wind energy costs ever seen,” Kiernan said.

“With continued technological innovation, wind energy has become so affordable that it offers utilities and consumers an irresistible value,” he added, citing recent Department of Energy (DOE) data showing the cost of U.S. wind power down by more than half over five years. “We believe Congress will do what it takes so we can keep these U.S. factories open and offer this increasingly affordable source of electricity to more Americans, instead of seeing the 92 percent dropoff we saw in 2013 when the tax credit was last allowed to expire.”

The DOE report also shows fix-priced wind energy is the most affordable energy option available, particularly after expected increases and volatility in the price of other energy sources are taken into account. Moreover, zero emission wind energy is ideally suited to help utilities comply with the pending EPA Clean Power Plan that will regulate emissions of carbon dioxide from existing power plants.

Extensions of the renewable energy Production Tax Credit (PTC) and alternative Investment Tax Credit are part of the EXPIRE Act, a bill that extends nearly 60 tax provisions now pending in the U.S. Senate. The PTC provides a lower tax rate to U.S. wind developers for the first 10 years of their projects, helping them compete with 100 years of incentives for other forms of power.

“The PTC helps correct flaws in the U.S. electricity market that does not value wind’s benefits for protecting the environment and consumers,” said Michael Goggin, AWEA Research Director. “Wind energy creates billions of dollars in economic value by drastically reducing pollution that harms public health and the environment, but wind developers do not get paid for that, even though consumers otherwise bear those costs.

“Stably-priced wind energy also protects consumers from price spikes for fuel, but that is not accounted for in the highly regulated electricity market because other energy sources get to pass their fuel price increases directly on to consumers,” Goggin said. “Policies like the PTC correct for those market failures to reach a more efficient market outcome.”

Over three-quarters of attendees at AWEA’s annual Wind Energy Finance & Investment Seminar are C-suite-level executives, presidents, vice presidents, or directors at their organizations.

Keynote speaker Austan Goolsbee told the group that while a carbon price may not pass Congress soon, investors thinking long-term are already adjusting their behavior. Goolsbee, recently chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, is economics professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.

Presenting the 3Q results was AWEA’s Manager of Industry Data & Analysis Emily Williams, who said 419 megawatts (MW) came online in the third quarter, for a total of 1,254 megawatts so far this year.

Much more is currently under construction: some 13,600 MW across 105 projects (of which 7,600 is in Texas, with the completion of more transmission lines there). Typically 60-70 percent of annual installations are completed in the fourth quarter, and the under-construction figure foreshadows a strong year in 2015, when the majority of the projects started under the last extension of the Production Tax Credit are expected to finish construction. An additional 3,700 MW of projects are “under development” with offtake agreements, but have not started construction.

America as of Sept. 30 had 46,400 wind turbines operating, with a total generating capacity of 62,300 MW.

Company executives at the Finance & Investment Seminar are speaking on federal and state policies critical to reaching the goal of wind energy supplying 20 percent of America’s electricity by 2030, or roughly four times what wind energy supplies today. Other topics include:

  • Breakthroughs in building transmission lines to open up America’s world-class wind resources to development.
  • New records in wind plant productivity due to continued technological progress
  • Mergers and acquisitions and the increasing use of investment vehicles known as “yieldcos”
  • A closing panel called “Inside the C-Suite,” with CEOs from Broadwind Energy, EDP Renewables, Pattern Energy, Deepwater Wind, and Vestas from 10:45 to 11:45 am on Tuesday.

The entire event is on the record and open to coverage by accredited journalists. The full schedule is available here. Lead sponsors are DNV GL, GE Power & Water, and Siemens. Also sponsoring are Akin Gump, Morrison Foerster, Rabobank, Clean Line Energy Partners, and Invenergy.