wind

After record-breaking 2009, US wind market growth slows in 2010

Following a record-breaking year of capacity additions in 2009, with 9.8 GW of wind projects installed, the US wind market finds itself confronting a growth-constrained 2010 and a near-term market landscape wrought with increased competition, according to a new market study, “US Wind Power Markets and Strategies: 2010-2025” from IHS Emerging Energy Research.

The study forecasts anywhere from 6.3-7.1 GW of wind could be installed in 2010, 40-60% lower than in 2009. “2010 marks the first time since 2004 that the US wind industry will not surpass the previous year’s growth level. Despite unprecedented federal wind incentives, reverberations from the financial crisis continue to create a difficult near-term market landscape especially in light of continued energy policy uncertainty,” explains IHS Senior Analyst, Matthew Kaplan, one of the study’s authors. However, Kaplan adds that “the US wind market is poised to emerge from this near-term uncertainty with a clearer path toward strong future growth”, thanks to the proliferation of favourable state and federal policies. As a result, IHS Emerging Energy Research project that the US wind industry is on track to add more than 165 GW of new capacity through 2025, resulting in a total installed base of 200 GW.

The US wind industry will represent US $330 billion in investments between 2010 and 2025, with more than 90 percent stemming from onshore wind, according to the study’s projections. The Midwest, Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states will act as major wind export hubs to areas with large appetites for renewables, including California, the Mid-Atlantic and the South. While the US is closer than ever to tapping into its enormous offshore potential with the expected completion of the Cape Wind project in 2013, offshore is expected to account for only 5% of total US wind build in 2025.

“The unprecedented decline in power demand and electricity and natural gas prices has had a profound effect on utility willingness to ink power purchase agreements,” says Kaplan. Despite large build years in 2009, leading independent power producers EDP Horizon and NextEra Energy Resources have slashed wind build expectations exemplifying near-term challenges.

As heightened transmission congestion and waning utility demand for wind have strained growth in traditional ‘wind hot spots’ including Texas, Minnesota and California, developers have been forced to prospect states with less prolific resources and more arduous development conditions. “Transmission remains one of the greatest barriers to the development of US wind projects. Coordinated national policies will be necessary to more efficiently link the US’ vast wind resources to high-demand regions, however, even with enabling policies, there will be a lag of several years for projects to become operational,” says Kaplan. “A national renewable energy standard or federal energy policy legislation along with a streamlined transmission siting and cost allocation process are the essential ingredients to building a robust future US wind market.”

Released in May 2010, IHS Emerging Energy Research’s 234-page study provides strategic market intelligence on US wind energy markets analysing development strategies, supply chain positioning, regulatory changes and growth in the new market landscape.

For additional information:

IHS Emerging Energy Research

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