Flag

An official website of the United States government

The Promise of Wind Power
4 MINUTE READ
November 30, 2015

Join #YALIGoesGreen this month. Learn how to get involved at yali.lab.dev.getusinfo.com/climate

Solar, biofuels and hydropower are among the energy sources the United States has been developing aggressively since President Obama began the transition to a clean energy economy with his Climate Action Plan.

Wind, an energy technology with a long history, is another green power source with great potential. A new report from the U.S. Energy Department analyzes how the nation might increase its use of wind power.

Many African nations are also investing in wind power, which can, as the U.S. report says, “address key societal challenges such as climate change, air quality and public health, and water scarcity.”

The Lake Turkana Wind Power Project in the north-east of Kenya aims to produce 20 percent of the country’s electricity generating capacity when it comes online in 2016.

Ayitepa Wind Farm the east coast of Ghana and is also slated to come online in 2016 and promises to generate 10 percent of the country’s generating capacity.

Issued in May, the almost-300-page report says the United States has tripled its use of wind power since 2008. Wind supplies 4.5 percent of the nation’s electricity today, and the nation could set a realistic plan to meet 10 percent of the electricity demand in 2020, 20 percent in 2030, and 35 percent in 2050.

If the nation does reach that 2050 target, the report calculates considerable benefits:

  • The nation’s total electric bill would be 3 percent lower.
  • Greenhouse gas emissions would drop by 14 percent.
  • Using less fossil fuel would reduce pollutants such as sulfur dioxides, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter.
  • Pollution-related deaths would be reduced by almost 22,000 between 2013 and 2050.
  • The use of water would go down 23 percent as the nation became less dependent on fossil-fuel power plants, which use water as a cooling agent.

Beyond these calculable benefits, Wind Vision predicts adoption of more wind power also would put downward price pressure on fossil fuels in energy markets, saving consumers $280 billion.

So if wind will give electricity for less money with less pollution, maybe wind power should be in your future too.