Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
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HI54UNI
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Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Construction of wind farms has fallen 71 percent nationwide this year and has disappeared from Iowa.
About 700 megawatts of capacity was completed in the first half of this year, and an additional 5,000 megawatts of capacity is under construction nationally ahead of the expiration of a grant program created by the 2009 stimulus bill, the American Wind Energy Association reported.
But industry officials say the industry will continue its slowdown unless Congress enacts a national renewable-electricity mandate to reassure investors that there will be a market for additional wind power. A proposed mandate has been shelved in the Senate.
``The numbers are dismal. They're getting worse,'' said Denise Bode, chief executive of the association.
No sites are under construction in Iowa, although the state remains No. 2 in total wind generation capacity with 3,670 megawatts, according to the wind association.
No. 1 Texas added 202 megawatts in the first half of the year, the biggest growth in the country, to extend its total capacity to 9,708. California ranks No. 3 with 2,739 megawatts, a gain of 17 this year.
Manufacturing expansion also is in a lull. Orders for turbines rose slightly during the second quarter but not enough to encourage manufacturers to expand, the association said.
http://globegazette.com/news/iowa/artic ... 002e0.html
About 700 megawatts of capacity was completed in the first half of this year, and an additional 5,000 megawatts of capacity is under construction nationally ahead of the expiration of a grant program created by the 2009 stimulus bill, the American Wind Energy Association reported.
But industry officials say the industry will continue its slowdown unless Congress enacts a national renewable-electricity mandate to reassure investors that there will be a market for additional wind power. A proposed mandate has been shelved in the Senate.
``The numbers are dismal. They're getting worse,'' said Denise Bode, chief executive of the association.
No sites are under construction in Iowa, although the state remains No. 2 in total wind generation capacity with 3,670 megawatts, according to the wind association.
No. 1 Texas added 202 megawatts in the first half of the year, the biggest growth in the country, to extend its total capacity to 9,708. California ranks No. 3 with 2,739 megawatts, a gain of 17 this year.
Manufacturing expansion also is in a lull. Orders for turbines rose slightly during the second quarter but not enough to encourage manufacturers to expand, the association said.
http://globegazette.com/news/iowa/artic ... 002e0.html
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HI54UNI
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Funny how the industry wants a mandate so people have to buy their overpriced, uncompetitive product. Maybe we should mandate that everybody has to buy a new Chevy Volt to help Government Motors out too. 
If fascism ever comes to America, it will come in the name of liberalism. Ronald Reagan, 1975.
Progressivism is cancer
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Progressivism is cancer
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Remember Chairman Obama's statement about energy prices necessarily skyrocketing under his "plan".HI54UNI wrote:Funny how the industry wants a mandate so people have to buy their overpriced, uncompetitive product. Maybe we should mandate that everybody has to buy a new Chevy Volt to help Government Motors out too.
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Love GM's Volt. A $42,000 electric car that goes 40 miles on a charge vs. the Nissan Leaf that sells for $10,000 less and goes 100 miles on a charge.
Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Not that I'm going to run out and buy a Volt, but that comparison sort of misses the fact that the Leaf is dead in the water after 100 miles, while the Volt is a hybrid, so after 40 miles it runs on gas as long as you keep putting it in. Still not worth $42,000 (or $35,000 after rebates).Baldy wrote:Love GM's Volt. A $42,000 electric car that goes 40 miles on a charge vs. the Nissan Leaf that sells for $10,000 less and goes 100 miles on a charge.
Back on topic, subsidies are good tools to encourage development and assist until mass production kicks in, but an industry can't expect to live on them forever.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Well, we don't want another ethanol boondoggle. Corn farmers and lobbyists for years push subsidies for corn so that we could make ethanol, only to find out that corn based ethanol was more expensive and almost just as greenhouse polluting as petroleum was - oh, and it resulted in food prices sharply increasing around the world.
If we're going to do alternative energy, it's going to need to be done right. But we're also going to have to realize that oil and coal are going to be significantly cheaper than other options for several years, and maybe decades, to come. It's easy to say "let's get away from oil", but it's harder to do so when you start talking about costs.
If we're going to do alternative energy, it's going to need to be done right. But we're also going to have to realize that oil and coal are going to be significantly cheaper than other options for several years, and maybe decades, to come. It's easy to say "let's get away from oil", but it's harder to do so when you start talking about costs.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Exactly right.GannonFan wrote:Well, we don't want another ethanol boondoggle. Corn farmers and lobbyists for years push subsidies for corn so that we could make ethanol, only to find out that corn based ethanol was more expensive and almost just as greenhouse polluting as petroleum was - oh, and it resulted in food prices sharply increasing around the world.
If we're going to do alternative energy, it's going to need to be done right. But we're also going to have to realize that oil and coal are going to be significantly cheaper than other options for several years, and maybe decades, to come. It's easy to say "let's get away from oil", but it's harder to do so when you start talking about costs.
Thread-killer extraordinaire.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Unfortunately today, subsidies seems to more political reward than anything else and an opportunity to queue up to the seemingly bottomless federal trough without having to produce any positive result. Whatever happened to people tinkering in their garage?mebison wrote: Back on topic, subsidies are good tools to encourage development and assist until mass production kicks in, but an industry can't expect to live on them forever.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Why not? They've madated that everyone must buy insurance....HI54UNI wrote:Funny how the industry wants a mandate so people have to buy their overpriced, uncompetitive product. Maybe we should mandate that everybody has to buy a new Chevy Volt to help Government Motors out too.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
LOL.
Paying 42K for ANY General Motors product is like paying 42K for a hooker who won't fvck.
Paying 42K for ANY General Motors product is like paying 42K for a hooker who won't fvck.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
GannonFan wrote:Well, we don't want another ethanol boondoggle. Corn farmers and lobbyists for years push subsidies for corn so that we could make ethanol, only to find out that corn based ethanol was more expensive and almost just as greenhouse polluting as petroleum was - oh, and it resulted in food prices sharply increasing around the world.
If we're going to do alternative energy, it's going to need to be done right. But we're also going to have to realize that oil and coal are going to be significantly cheaper than other options for several years, and maybe decades, to come. It's easy to say "let's get away from oil", but it's harder to do so when you start talking about costs.
Although we tend to forget that oil and gas are heavily subsidized now, with most drilling done on public land, and the subsidy is in the form of absurdly low royalties.
Your cheap gas/oil would not be so cheap if it was for the federal subsidies. Put full free market forces out there and wind/nuclear/solar are much more competitive.
Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
dbackjon wrote:Although we tend to forget that oil and gas are heavily subsidized now, with most drilling done on public land, and the subsidy is in the form of absurdly low royalties.
Your cheap gas/oil would not be so cheap if it was for the federal subsidies. Put full free market forces out there and wind/nuclear/solar are much more competitive.
Of course they are. Because government officials are puppets of the big money special interest groups (and there are few, if any, special interest groups with bigger money than the oil and gas cartels).
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Both excellent points.JayJ79 wrote:dbackjon wrote:Although we tend to forget that oil and gas are heavily subsidized now, with most drilling done on public land, and the subsidy is in the form of absurdly low royalties.
Your cheap gas/oil would not be so cheap if it was for the federal subsidies. Put full free market forces out there and wind/nuclear/solar are much more competitive.
Of course they are. Because government officials are puppets of the big money special interest groups (and there are few, if any, special interest groups with bigger money than the oil and gas cartels).
Calculate the cost of government road construction, environmental clean up, healthcare expenditures, the cost of keeping the Persian Gulf and the Straits of Hormuz open for the last 50 years and oil all of a sudden isn't nearly as competitive. That being said, it still contains way, way, way more energy per unit than anything else.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
FIFY. But, we won't see the kind of investment needed to make that a reality until after the world's oil reserves run dry.kalm wrote:Both excellent points.JayJ79 wrote:
Of course they are. Because government officials are puppets of the big money special interest groups (and there are few, if any, special interest groups with bigger money than the oil and gas cartels).
Calculate the cost of government road construction, environmental clean up, healthcare expenditures, the cost of keeping the Persian Gulf and the Straits of Hormuz open for the last 50 years and oil all of a sudden isn't nearly as competitive. That being said, it still contains way, way, way more energy per unit than anything else besides fusion.
Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
And that won't happen until your grandchildren's grandchildren's grandchildren are long dead and buried.Grizalltheway wrote:FIFY. But, we won't see the kind of investment needed to make that a reality until after the world's oil reserves run dry.kalm wrote:
Both excellent points.
Calculate the cost of government road construction, environmental clean up, healthcare expenditures, the cost of keeping the Persian Gulf and the Straits of Hormuz open for the last 50 years and oil all of a sudden isn't nearly as competitive. That being said, it still contains way, way, way more energy per unit than anything else besides fusion.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
We'll keep stretching the oil reserves into infinity. In a couple million years, think of all the oil that will be found in our graveyards.Baldy wrote:And that won't happen until your grandchildren's grandchildren's grandchildren are long dead and buried.Grizalltheway wrote:
FIFY. But, we won't see the kind of investment needed to make that a reality until after the world's oil reserves run dry.
These signatures have a 500 character limit?
What if I have more personalities than that?
What if I have more personalities than that?
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HI54UNI
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
If we are subsidizing things let's subsidize stuff that actually works like oil, coal, or nuclear instead of windmills that work at best 40% of the time.dbackjon wrote:GannonFan wrote:Well, we don't want another ethanol boondoggle. Corn farmers and lobbyists for years push subsidies for corn so that we could make ethanol, only to find out that corn based ethanol was more expensive and almost just as greenhouse polluting as petroleum was - oh, and it resulted in food prices sharply increasing around the world.
If we're going to do alternative energy, it's going to need to be done right. But we're also going to have to realize that oil and coal are going to be significantly cheaper than other options for several years, and maybe decades, to come. It's easy to say "let's get away from oil", but it's harder to do so when you start talking about costs.
Although we tend to forget that oil and gas are heavily subsidized now, with most drilling done on public land, and the subsidy is in the form of absurdly low royalties.
Your cheap gas/oil would not be so cheap if it was for the federal subsidies. Put full free market forces out there and wind/nuclear/solar are much more competitive.
If fascism ever comes to America, it will come in the name of liberalism. Ronald Reagan, 1975.
Progressivism is cancer
All my posts are satire
Progressivism is cancer
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
I can understand the arguments against ethanol, as the processing really isn't all that efficient.
Don't know what the downside of wind turbines are, though.
Don't know what the downside of wind turbines are, though.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
HI54UNI wrote:If we are subsidizing things let's subsidize stuff that actually works like oil, coal, or nuclear instead of windmills that work at best 40% of the time.dbackjon wrote:
Although we tend to forget that oil and gas are heavily subsidized now, with most drilling done on public land, and the subsidy is in the form of absurdly low royalties.
Your cheap gas/oil would not be so cheap if it was for the federal subsidies. Put full free market forces out there and wind/nuclear/solar are much more competitive.
Nationalize energy now. Remove the boot of the foreign oppressor from the neck of the American people.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
How about a jobs program funding research for better methods of energy generation, a la the Oak Ridge project of the 1940's?
Put people to work and create better energy alternatives with lasting benefits for decades to come?
Put people to work and create better energy alternatives with lasting benefits for decades to come?
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
I've been hearing that since before 1970. Don't hold your breath.LeadBolt wrote:How about a jobs program funding research for better methods of energy generation, a la the Oak Ridge project of the 1940's?
Put people to work and create better energy alternatives with lasting benefits for decades to come?
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
I'm not holding my breath, but development of better technology makes more sense to me than making energy captive to the whims of partisan politics.houndawg wrote:I've been hearing that since before 1970. Don't hold your breath.LeadBolt wrote:How about a jobs program funding research for better methods of energy generation, a la the Oak Ridge project of the 1940's?
Put people to work and create better energy alternatives with lasting benefits for decades to come?
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
It does make more sense but it ain't going to happen on purpose.LeadBolt wrote:I'm not holding my breath, but development of better technology makes more sense to me than making energy captive to the whims of partisan politics.houndawg wrote:
I've been hearing that since before 1970. Don't hold your breath.
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
This is all very interesting as they are talking about putting up wind turbines on mountains here in SWVa and a solar power provider is going to be building a manufacturing plant as well in southern Virginia.
Maybe individual states, who have the $$$, can subsidize some of this???
Maybe individual states, who have the $$$, can subsidize some of this???


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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Wind plants generate at only 15 to maybe 40% % of capacity. The bulk of wind generation is seasonal, usually spring and fall, with spring being the most productive. This often puts wind in competition with other renewable sources such as hydro. In the Northwest for example (one of the biggest wind producers in the country) when the big Columbia Gorge wind farms come on line, the Bonneville Power Administration sometimes has to shut down hydroelectric turbines and simply dump the water down the spillway! In the dog days of summer when electricity demand is highest, wind is no where to be found, so wind has displaced minimal capacity of any other type of generation, it has only added capacity at times when power demand is lowest, spring and fall.JayJ79 wrote:I can understand the arguments against ethanol, as the processing really isn't all that efficient.
Don't know what the downside of wind turbines are, though.
To ensure system reliability, grid operators usually keep exactly enough spinning reserve to cover the loss of one major power generation unit, usually a coal or nuclear plant. Wind requires almost dedicated spinning reserve, since it can gust up or down. Windmills shut down if the wind speed goes too high or low. To cover this problem, grid operators keep extra spinning reserve. This extra spinning reserve is usually an old, low efficiency gas plant, burning gas just to cover the unreliable windmills. So not only do you have to pay for the wind power, you have to pay to have an entire gas plant to be on line just to balance the wind fluctuations. In most places the cost of this extra spinning reserve is billed to other generators, nuke coal or gas by regulation. Further if a generator contracts to deliver power but fails, the cost of the replacement power is billed to the original generator who had the original contract except in the case of wind generators, whose replacement power is billed to the other generators, Nuke, coal or gas (thanks regulators).
Let’s not even start in on the environmental problems with wind, such as chopping birds, miles upon miles of dirt service roads that cause stream siltation etc.
So why waste time and resources doing this?
A couple of articles that highlight some of the issues:
http://online.wsj.com/article/NA_WSJ_PU ... 57485.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.oregonlive.com/business/inde ... growt.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- Appaholic
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Re: Wind Farm Construction Grinds to Halt
Unless that industry's raw materials happen to lie in a state that hold's the first presidential caucus every 4 years.....mebison wrote:Back on topic, subsidies are good tools to encourage development and assist until mass production kicks in, but an industry can't expect to live on them forever.
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