WPS4868 P olicy R eseaRch W oRking P aPeR 4868 Wind Power Development Economics and Policies G. Cornelis van Kooten Govinda R. Timilsina The World Bank Development Research Group Environment and Energy Team March 2009 Policy ReseaRch WoRking PaPeR 4868 Abstract This study reviews the prospects of wind power at the faces a large number of technical, economic, financial, global level. Existing studies indicate that the earth's institutional, market, and other barriers. To overcome wind energy supply potential significantly exceeds these barriers, many countries have employed various global energy demand. Yet, only 1 percent of the global policy instruments, including capital subsidies, tax electricity demand is currently derived from wind power incentives, tradable energy certificates, feed-in tariffs, despite 40 percent annual growth in wind generating grid access guarantees and mandatory standards. Besides capacity over the past 25 years. More than 98 percent these policies, climate change mitigation initiatives of total current wind power capacity is installed in the resulting from the Kyoto Protocol (e.g., CO2-emission developed countries plus China and India. It has been reduction targets in developed countries and the Clean estimated that wind power could supply 7 to 34 percent Development Mechanism in developing countries) have of global electricity needs by 2050. However, wind power played a significant role in promoting wind power. This paper--a product of the Environment and Energy Team, Development Research Group--is part of a larger effort in the department to study climate change and clean energy issues. Policy Research Working Papers are also posted on the Web at http://econ.worldbank.org. The author may be contacted at gtimilsina@worldbank.org. The Policy Research Working Paper Series disseminates the findings of work in progress to encourage the exchange of ideas about development issues. An objective of the series is to get the findings out quickly, even if the presentations are less than fully polished. The papers carry the names of the authors and should be cited accordingly. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. Produced by the Research Support Team Wind Power Development: Economics and Policies G. Cornelis van Kooten Department of Economics University of Victoria, Canada Govinda R. Timilsina Development Research Group, The World Bank Washington, DC Keywords: Wind energy; renewable energy technology; energy policy Corresponding author gtimilsina@worldbank.org. 1. Introduction The global energy supply system faces challenges on three fronts: price volatility, energy security and the environment, particularly regarding local air pollution and global warming. A primary cause of these problems is the predominant share of fossil fuels in the global energy supply mix. Currently, fossil fuels account for more than 80 percent of the global energy supply and that share is not expected to change over the next 25 years under a business as usual scenario (IEA, 2008). To address these concerns, there would be a need to diversify the energy supply portfolio towards cleaner and more sustainable sources of energy, such as renewable energy (RE) (Ayres, 2008; Anderson and Winne, 2007). RE sources include large-scale hydro, small-scale run-of-river hydro, wind, tidal, solar, wave, municipal solid wastes and biomass for the generation of electricity and space heating, and biofuels (ethanol and biodiesel) for transportation. Some countries have already set targets to increase the share of RE in their energy supply mix. 1 For example, the European Union (EU) has introduced an overall target of a 20 percent share of RE sources in energy consumption by 2020 (CEC, 2008). In China, RE sources are expected to account for 15 percent of the total primary energy supply by 2020 (Martinot, 2008). Although most RE sources have exhibited strong growth recently, the deployment of wind power has significantly outpaced other RE sources with the exception of large hydro. During 2001-2007, 70 Gigawatts (GW) of wind generating capacity was installed globally, which is more than half of the added hydropower capacity (134 GW) and almost seven times as much as the amount of solar photovoltaic generating capacity installed during the same period (EPI, 2008). Still, the share of wind power in global energy supply is negligible. Moreover, the recent world energy outlook published by the International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that less than two percent of the globe's energy supply will be met by wind power by 2030 (IEA, 2008). An obvious question is: Why is the contribution of wind energy to the global energy supply mix negligible currently and expected to remain very small in the near future? The answer rests with several factors, including technical, economic, financial and institutional barriers. To successfully implement wind power on a larger scale, it is 1 RE targets in many countries are presented later in this paper. 2 necessary to focus on policies and strategies to reduce market barriers and promote research and development to further reduce the costs of wind turbine technology. Advances in climate change mitigation negotiations also will strengthen the financial picture for wind, as would include wind strategies in policies addressing energy security. The purpose of the current review is to examine these issues and provide insights concerning the future potential of wind power as a renewable energy source. Although there is a large volume of research in the field of wind power, the existing literature focuses more on engineering or technological aspects of wind energy. Hence, our review, unintentionally, has a somewhat engineering or technical flavor although our focus is on economic and policy issues despite the fact that such peer-reviewed research is still in its infancy. The outline of the paper is as follows: in the next section, we present the status of wind power installation, followed by resource potential and future development prospects. We then discuss wind power generation costs, key barriers to wind power development and policy options to overcome those barriers. This is followed by discussions on the intermittent nature of wind energy and grid interconnection issues. The roles of climate change mitigation initiatives to promote wind power are discussed before we draw key conclusions. 2. Current Status of Wind Power Installations Installed global wind generating capacity expanded rapidly from only 10 megawatts (MW) in 1980 to 94,124 MW of installed capacity by the end of 2007 (see Table 1). 2 At the end of 2007, Europe and North America accounted for 80.5% of global wind power capacity. Overall, developed countries accounted for some 85% of installed wind capacity; upon including China and India, this increased to 98.3% of global installed capacity. As indicated in Figure 1, the top ten countries account for more than 86% of total global wind capacity, or 81.1 GW. With the exception of China and India, and a few other countries, very little electricity is produced from wind in developing countries, and especially in the least developed countries, although wind is used on a small scale to drive mechanical devices such as water pumps. 2 Kilo is abbreviated with k and equals 103; Mega (M, 106); Giga (G, 109); Tera (T, 1012). 3 Table 1. Cumulative Installed Wind Power Capacity (MW), 1980-2007 Year Germany U.S. Spain India China Denmark Other Global 1980 0 8 0 0 0 2 n.a. 10 1981 0 18 0 0 0 7 n.a 25 1982 0 84 0 0 0 12 n.a 96 1983 0 254 0 0 0 20 n.a 274 1984 0 653 0 0 0 27 n.a 680 1985 0 945 0 0 0 50 25 1,020 1986 0 1,265 0 0 0 82 n.a 1347 1987 5 1,333 0 0 0 115 n.a 1,453 1988 15 1,231 0 0 0 197 137 1,580 1989 27 1,332 0 0 0 262 109 1,730 1990 62 1,484 0 0 0 343 41 1,930 1991 112 1,709 5 39 0 413 n.a 2278 1992 180 1,680 50 39 0 458 103 2,510 1993 335 1,635 60 79 0 487 394 2,990 1994 643 1,663 70 185 0 539 390 3,490 1995 1,130 1,612 140 576 38 637 647 4,780 1996 1,548 1,614 230 820 79 835 974 6,100 1997 2,080 1,611 512 940 170 1,120 1,167 7,600 1998 2,870 1,837 830 1,015 224 1,428 1,996 10,200 1999 4,445 2,490 1,584 1,077 268 1,718 2,018 13,600 2000 6,104 2,578 2,235 1,220 346 2,300 2,617 17,400 2001 8,754 4,275 3,337 1,456 402 2,417 3,259 23,900 2002 11,994 4,685 4,825 1,702 469 2,880 4,545 31,100 2003 14,609 6,372 6,203 2,125 567 3,110 6,445 39,431 2004 16,629 6,725 8,263 3,000 764 3,117 9,122 47,620 2005 18,415 9,149 10,027 4,430 1,260 3,128 12,682 59,091 2006 20,622 11,575 11,623 6,270 2,604 3,136 18,303 74,133 2007 22,247 16,818 15,145 8,000 6,050 3,125 22,737 94,122 Source: EPI (2008) Over the period 1980 to 2007, growth in wind generating capacity has averaged 44.4% per annum, although it has slowed to 27.4% since 1999. It is surprising that the growth in capacity is forecast to continue at well above 15% until 2012. Installed capacity is expected to surpass 100,000 MW by the end of 2008 (Renewable Energy Industry, 2008). Although it registered very high growth rates in recent years, the current role of wind power in meeting global electricity demand is almost negligible as it accounts for only about 1% of the global electricity supply (IEA, 2008). 4 Figure 1. Distribution of Global Installed Wind Capacity across Countries, 2007 Portugal, 2.3% ROW, 13.8% Germany, UK, 2.5% 23.6% France, 2.6% Italy, 2.9% Denmark, 3.3% China, 6.4% USA , 17.9% India, 8.5% Spain, 16.1% Source: Renewable Energy Industry (2008) 3. Resource Potential and Future Development Prospects A number of studies provide estimates of the global potential of wind power generation (Archer and Jacobson, 2005; Global Wind Energy Council & Greenpeace International, 2006; IEA, 2008). Archer and Jacobson (2005) in particular argue that the earth has enough wind resources to meet current energy demand for all purposes (6995 to 10,177 Mtoe) and over seven times the world's current electricity capacity (1.6-1.8 TW). They arrive at this conclusion by analyzing approximately 7,500 surface stations and another 500 balloon- launch stations. More than 13% of all reporting stations experience mean annual wind speeds greater than the 6.9 meters per second (m/s) at a hub height of 80 m (i.e., wind power class 3 or greater), which they consider to be low cost wind power resources. They find that northern Europe (along the North Sea), the southern tip of the South American continent, the island of 5 Tasmania in Australia, the Great Lakes region, and the northeastern and northwestern coasts of North America have the strongest wind power potentials. If turbines were set up in all the regions with wind speeds greater then 6.9 m/s, they would generate 72 TW of electricity, which is almost five times the world's current energy use. However, it is not possible to set up turbines in every region identified due to existing buildings, land rights and other obstacles. Nevertheless, even 20% of those sites could satisfy current world energy consumption. A study initiated by the United Nations' Environment Program (UNEP) to evaluate wind power potential in 19 African countries estimates that the wind power potential could reach 53 TW in those countries alone (InWEnt Consulting, 2004). As a result of concerns about climate change and higher prices for fossil fuels, wind power has excellent potential for continued rapid deployment. A 2006 joint study by the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) and Greenpeace International (GI) estimates that wind energy can make a major contribution to global electricity supply within the next 30 years (see Table 2). The study shows that wind energy could supply 5% of the world's electricity by 2030 and 6.6% by 2050 under the reference wind power scenario; 15.6% in 2030 to 17.7% by 2050 under the moderate scenario; and 29.1% in 2030 up to 34.2% by 2050 under the advanced scenario. GWEC and GI (2006) projections of installed capacity, electricity output and the contribution of wind power to global electricity supply by 2030 and 2050 are provided in Table 2. Table 2. Projection of Wind Power Development Scenario Installed capacity Electricity output Contribution of wind power (GW) (TWh) to total electricity generation (%) 2030 2050 2030 2050 2030 2050 Reference 364 577 892 1,517 5 6.6 Moderate 1,129 1,557 2,769 4,092 15.6 17.7 Advanced 2,107 3,010 5,176 7,911 29.1 34.3 Note: The reference scenario assumes 15% annual growth rate of wind power until 2010, 10% for 2011-2014 and falling to 3% per annum by 2031. The growth rates under the moderate scenario are: 19% through 2010, 16% for 2011-2014, 15% for 2015-2020 and declines to 10% through 2025 before falling to 5%. Under the advanced wind energy scenario, growth rates are up to 20% to 2015; falling to 17% to 2020; then reduces to 10% for the next five years to 2025, before falling below 5%. Source: GWEC & GI (2006) 6 The projections of wind power development vary across studies based on the underlying assumptions and projections used in their models. In a recent study, the IEA (2008) estimates wind power development potential under two scenarios referred to as ACT and BLUE. The ACT scenario assumes that extant technologies and ones that are in an advanced state of development can bring global CO2 emissions back to current levels by 2050. The BLUE scenario assumes that CO2 emissions can be reduced by 50% from current levels by 2050. While the ACT scenarios are demanding, the BLUE scenarios require urgent implementation of unprecedented and far-reaching new policies in the energy sector. Under the ACT scenario, global wind power capacity is estimated to increase from 94 GW in 2007 to 1,360 GW in 2050. The capacity would increase to more than 2,010 GW in 2050 under the BLUE scenario. In the ACT scenario, electricity production from wind contributes 2,712 TWh/yr in 2030 and 3,607 TWh/yr in 2050. In the BLUE scenario, wind power adds 2,663 TWh/yr in 2030 and 5,174 TWh/yr in 2050. Wind power constitutes 12% of global electricity production in 2050 in the BLUE scenario compared to 2% at the baseline. Wind power production is expected to grow significantly in OECD countries, and in emerging economies such as China and India. In the BLUE scenario, China leads in wind power generation in 2050 with a 31% share. In both scenarios, onshore generation of wind power dominates, although by 2050 some 20% or more power will be generated by (more expensive) offshore wind farms. In order to achieve a more diversified energy portfolio, the U.S. Department of Energy recently explored the possibility of supplying 20% of the nation's total electricity demand through wind by 2030. A study commissioned by the Department (USDOE, 2008) concluded that a 20% wind scenario in 2030, while ambitious, might prove feasible if certain challenges can be overcome. First, the U.S. would require 300 GW of wind power capacity to be installed by 2030 to meet the 20% wind scenario, which is almost 18 times as high as the 2007 capacity of about 17 GW. Further, it would require construction of more than 20,000 km of high-voltage transmission lines, which is opposed by several states as it would likely increase their electricity rates (as such a network would tend to equalize rates across regions). The USDOE study estimates that upwards of 600 GW of wind generating capacity could be installed at a cost of $60 to $100 per megawatt-hour (MWh), including the costs of connecting to the extant transmission system (USDOE, 2008, p.9). The federal government's 7 production tax credit would reduce the cost to investors, while technological innovations are expected to reduce actual costs as well. Overall, the 20% wind scenario would result in US$43 billion in incremental cost but would also result in cumulative CO2 reductions of more than 7,600 million metric tons (Mt of CO2) by 2030. Thus, by increasing reliance on wind energy for electricity production to 20%, CO2 emissions can be reduced at a cost of about $5.70 per ton of CO2 (tCO2) according the USDOE (2008). If this is realistic, then wind energy development has a promising future in the United States. 4. Costs of Wind Power Generation The costs of generating wind power depend to a large extent on wind resources, in particular, mean wind speed at hub height, the cost of turbines and related equipment, the proximity to a sufficiently strong transmission grid (i.e. the cost of grid extension and grid reinforcement), and the accessibility of the site. Other factors such as the existing generating mix, system load profiles, connections to grids in other countries/regions, electricity markets, system operating procedures, and land costs also have a significant impact on the costs of wind power generation. A large number of studies compare the costs of wind power with those of other electricity generation technologies (e.g., NEA/IEA, 2005; Kammen and Pacca, 2004; Lazard, 2008; CPUC, 2008; EIA, 2008; ESMAP/WB, 2008). Since electricity generation technologies vary significantly in terms of their investment requirements and operational characteristics, costs are converted to a level or base for comparison purposes, known as the levelized (or bus bar) cost of electricity generation. The levelized cost includes mainly investment or capital costs, operation and maintenance (O&M) costs, and fuel costs. While capital and fixed O&M costs are proportional to installed capacity, variable O&M and fuel costs are functions of electricity output. Recent studies show that wind power can be competitive with conventional sources of electricity generation. A comparison of the levelized costs of various electricity generation technologies released by the California Public Utilities Commission on May 13, 2008 shows that wind power is one of the cheapest options with levelized cost of US$89.10/MWh (CPUC, 2008). Levelized costs per MWh expressed in 2008 US$ of other technologies examined by the Commissions are as follows: Supercritical Coal ­ $106; Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Coal ­ $115; IGCC Coal with Carbon Capture & Storage (CCS) ­ $173; 8 Biogas ­ $86; Gas Combined Cycle ­ $94; Geothermal ­ $102; Hydro ­ $105; Concentrating Solar Thermal (CSP) ­ $127; Nuclear ­ $153; and Biomass ­ $165. This study used fixed 2008 price for fuels instead of projected fuel prices and prices of fuels and materials were at their peak in that year. The costs do not include external costs such as carbon tax. 3 Lazard (2008) also estimates that wind power is one of the cheapest options for generating electricity in the United States with levelized cost ranging from $44 per MWh to $91/MWh in 2008 dollars. For other generating technologies, Lazard (2008) estimates levelized cost ranges of (in 2008 US$ per MWh) $221-$334 for peak (open-cycle) gas, $104- $134 for IGCC, $98-$126 for nuclear, $74-$135 for advanced supercritical coal, 4 $73-$100 for Gas Combined Cycle, $109-$154 for solar PV (crystalline), $96-$124 for solar PV (thin film), $90-$145 for solar thermal, $115-$125 for fuel cell, $50-$94 for biomass, $50-$81 for landfill gas, and $42-$69 for geothermal. These estimates do not represent the true cost to society, however, because they include various government incentives, such as investment and production tax credits, accelerated asset depreciation and reduced tax rates. Further assumptions are 60% debt financing at 7% interest rate and 40% equity financing at 12% cost. Fuel prices used in the estimates are current fixed prices instead of projected prices. Since the study included taxes and subsidies, it deviates from cost-benefit analysis (CBA) methods. All of the above cost calculations are for the United States. Moreover, those costs do not include transmission costs to connect electricity grids, which could be very high for wind power, especially where wind farms are remotely sited (e.g., offshore or mountainous regions). Also ignored are the increased costs of managing an electric grid when variable wind power enters into an existing generation mix. The cost of wind power relative to other technologies varies significantly across countries and locations. ESMAP/World Bank (2008) estimates of the costs of electricity generation equipment for three countries, the United States, India and Romania, indicate that there are large variations in overnight construction costs across size of generation capacity 3 Please refer to CPUC (2008) for detailed information on data and methodology used and assumptions made while estimating these costs. 4 Upper range includes 90% carbon capture and storage. 9 and locations/countries. 5 NEA and IEA (2005) calculate levelized costs of electricity generation technologies for various countries using data collected from a survey of system operators and power producers. Table 3 presents the range of levelized costs for various technologies. As can be seen from the table, the cost ranges are very wide for most of the technologies as electricity generation costs vary across countries. The table also presents the weights of different components of the levelized costs for different technologies. While capital is the main component for non-fossil fuel technologies, fuel costs account for more than half of the total costs with most fossil fuel based technologies. The comparisons of levelized costs of electricity generation technologies significantly vary across existing studies for reasons related to fuel price projections, differences in material and labor costs across regions and studies, employment of different discount rates, and differences in exchange rates. In many instances, costs are not comparable across the studies due to a large divergence in their underlying assumptions and data. For example, cost estimates in the NEA and IEA (2005) study are expressed in 2003 values, whereas the cost estimates of CUPC (2008) and Lazard (2008) are expressed in 2008 dollars. Moreover, while the NEA and IEA study uses fuel price forecasts, CUPC (2008) and Lazard (2008) use current fuel prices and keep the price fixed over the life of the technology. Moreover, some studies follow financial analysis (e.g., CPUC, 2008; Lazard, 2008), whereas others (e.g., NEA & IEA (2005) follow economic analysis and hence the costs are not comparable across the studies. The levelized costs presented in Table 3 do not include externality costs. Thus, the costs reported in Table 3 are not the total costs to the society. Moreover, if costs of externalities, such as costs of local air pollution, GHG emissions and other externalities (e.g., impacts of wind power on land use), are taken into appropriate account, the total costs of electricity generation technology also would change. Using a life cycle cost approach, some studies (e.g., Owen, 2004; Roth and Ambs, 2004) show that wind power could be as competitive as fossil fuels if environmental externalities are appropriately accounted for in calculating true social costs. 5 However, the ESMAP & WB (2008) study does not calculate levelized costs of electricity generation. 10 Table 3: Comparison of Levelized Costs of Wind Power with Other Technologies, 2003 $US/MWh Plant At 5% discount rate At 10% discount rate Levelized Share in levelized cost (%) Levelized Share in levelized cost (%) Type cost cost US$/MWh Capital O&M Fuel US$/MWh Capital O&M Fuel Wind (onshore) 31.1-92.3 79 21 0 46.1-144.2 85 15 0 Wind (offshore) 50.5-94.3 67 33 0 66.0-123.4 75 25 0 Solar thermal 165.5 77 23 0 269.4 86 14 0 Solar PV 120.6-484.8 96 5 0 209-1876 97 3 0 Small hydro 39.7-142.9 78 22 0 63.5-241.9 87 13 0 Large hydro 45.4 96 4 0 84.9 98 2 0 Nuclear 20.8-48.0 51 30 18 31.7-68.6 67 21 13 Lignite) 29.4-56.9 33 17 50 37.1-64.4 48 14 38 Coal 17.9-47.8 33 21 47 25.9-69.1 57 14 29 Coal (IGCC) 27.3-48.2 34 26 40 38.2-59.1 50 20 30 Gas (CCGT) 38.2-60.4 13 7 80 40.9-62.6 19 7 74 Gas (open) 46.70 8 4 88 49.0 13 4 83 CHP (Gas) 28.3-62.3 21 21 58 31.9-80.9 30 19 51 CHP (Coal) 25.0-36.8 41 34 25 34.8-46.9 56 26 18 CHP (other) 29.4-96.3 22 12 67 33.5-99.5 31 11 59 Biomass 37.3-85.2 36 24 40 50.3-100.5 52 18 30 Source: NEA & IEA (2005) Fuel costs of CHP plants are net of heat benefits. Weighted average costs of various plant sizes were considered while calculating the shares of capital, O&M and fuel costs. Estimates do not account for tax preferences, subsidies or environmental externalities. More detailed discussion of methods is found in NEA & IEA (2005). Due to decreasing capital costs of wind power (see Neij, 2008), potentially increasing fossil fuel prices in the long term, and an increasing desire to account for environmental costs and benefits in electrical generation (e.g., via carbon credits), wind power is becoming more competitive with conventional resources for electricity generation. However, the direct cost of construction and operation is not the only factor to determine penetration of wind power into electricity grids. Other factors such as transmission access, intermittency, system reliability and grid characteristics significantly influence the contribution of wind power to a country's electricity supply system (see Sovacool, 2007). 11 5. Barriers to Wind Power Development Despite the apparent advantages of wind power development, wind power faces major barriers, particularly in developing countries. These can be classified into technical barriers, economic and financial barriers, market barriers, institutional or capacity barriers, and others. Perhaps the most critical technical barriers are lack of access to transmission lines, difficulties in getting cranes and/or turbine components to sites (as mentioned in the preceding section), and the challenges related to the intermittent nature of wind (Liik et al., 2003; Lund, 2005) that are discussed in more detail below. Another important technical barrier, particularly in developing countries, is the lack of data needed to assess the size of local wind resources. Available meteorological data are often inadequate for assessing wind resources, so mesoscale modeling based on satellite data with follow-up ground-based wind measurements and microscale wind modeling of the most promising areas are required to obtain `bankable' wind projects. Otherwise, the uncertainty will discourage investors from developing wind power plants. Equipment misspecification to comply with the power quality in the local grid also poses constraints. For example, at the early stage of wind power development in the Indian State of Gujrat, second-hand equipment purchased from California could not operate effectively within the Western Electricity Grid of India, which typically undergoes large fluctuations in frequency and where outages are common-place (Amin, 1999). The economic and financial barriers include high upfront capital costs and uncertainty regarding financial returns. This barrier is related to the lack of high quality wind resource data, thereby inhibiting access to financing. Since wind power is more capital intensive compared to conventional fossil-fuel fired generating technologies, the relatively high capital costs continue to be an obstacle to the adoption of wind power at the scale reflecting its technical potential. Moreover, the costs of constructing transmission lines from a wind farm to an electricity grid can be high, thereby making wind power generation less financially attractive relative to thermal power plants that can be constructed near existing transmission corridors or load centers at lower costs per kW of installed capacity. In the case of off-grid wind power, companies may be hesitant to make investments because the long-term costs of small, wind-driven grids are difficult to predict and rural 12 communities may lack financial resources to make payments; thus, the off-grid electricity market is somewhat risky (Reiche, Covarrubias and Martinot, 2000). This may be more the case in developing countries where there is also a greater need for off-grid electrification. Overall, wind power developers face difficulties in raising local equity due to the high level of technical complications and financial uncertainties (e.g., unfamiliar and potentially risky investment with uncertain returns). For the same reasons, wind power developers face difficulties in securing loans. Loan requests are often declined or face high interest rates due to high risk premiums. Because of these financial barriers, wind power may not be an attractive portfolio option for private investors, particularly in developing countries. Unless implemented under the CDM or JI, wind power does not receive `green' benefits, while fossil fuels are not taxed for their environmental externalities. This results in an uneven playing field, which can be a substantial market barrier to wind power. Moreover, wind power plants generally tend to be smaller, and wind power producers have less clout in negotiating favorable terms with larger market players. Obviously, small projects face high transaction costs at every stage of the project development cycle. Lack of proper institutions and local capacity are additional key barriers to wind power development, specifically in developing countries. In many countries, production and distribution of electricity are still controlled by a monopolist, often the state. There is a general lack of economic institutions for facilitating contracts (i.e., power purchase agreements) between the wind power developers and system operators (Beck and Martinot, 2004). Furthermore, many wind power projects are implemented as turn-key projects with bilateral or multilateral funding from developed countries. Once the projects are handed over to a local company or system operator, they encounter constraints related to a lack of operating skills and equipment parts. This eventually results in inefficiencies, outages and even shutdown of wind farm facilities. These types of problems could eventually lead to a loss of future interest in small-scale wind power development in remote villages (UNEP, 2001). Besides the aforementioned barriers, wind power also suffers from other barriers. In some countries, wind power must meet stringent licensing requirements. Wind turbines along migratory bird paths and/or in coastal areas often need to address specific environmental concerns before they can be erected. Competition for land use with agricultural, recreational, 13 scenic or development interests can also occur (Beck and Martinot, 2004). 6. Policy Instruments to Support Wind Energy Many countries have developed strategies to reduce or overcome the barriers mentioned above. They have also set renewable energy targets. As of 2005, 43 countries had renewable energy targets, of which ten were developing countries: Brazil, China, the Dominican Republic, Egypt, India, Malaysia, Mali, the Philippines, South Africa and Thailand (Martinot, 2005). Various incentives are in place to promote wind energy, including development subsidies, tax breaks and feed-in tariffs. Table 4 presents a summary of policies in 63 countries for which we could find information regarding their wind potential, renewable energy targets and current policies for increasing reliance on wind energy. Most of these countries have relatively good to excellent potential to generate wind power, especially if offshore potential is taken into account in the case of coastal countries. As illustrated in Table 4, the policy instruments considered by various countries can be classified into three categories: (i) fiscal incentives, (ii) regulatory incentives, and (iii) other policies and programs. The key fiscal instruments include capital subsidies, tax incentives, feed-in tariffs, price guarantees, and tradable energy certificates. The main regulatory instruments introduced are mandatory targets, renewable energy portfolio/obligation standards. The other policies and programs include priority in dispatching, transmission access, and long-term contracts. As of 2005, 25 developed and nine developing countries provided feed-in tariffs for wind energy, the same number of developed and six developing countries had provisions to provide capital subsidies, and 26 industrialized and nine developing nations provided other forms of aid (reduced taxes, tax credits, etc.) (Martinot, 2005). Moreover, 15 countries provided tradable (renewable) energy certificates that could be used, for example, on the European climate exchange (Japan and Australia were the only non-European countries to offer this option). It is also clear that state ownership and public investment are often required to facilitate the development of wind power. 14 Table 4. Wind Potential, Policies and Wind Opportunities in Selected Countries, 2007 Country Wind potentiala Renewable energy targetb Wind energy policy Albania NE mountains, south 400 Gwh/year (4% of generation from wind) by 2020 No information is available hills have potential Argentina Immense 300 MW by 2010 US$10/MWh subsidy for first wind farms (no time limit noted); tax credits Australia Good 2% of electricity from renewables by 2010, 20% (9.5 Mandatory targets, construction of new transmission lines to TWh) by 2020; 10 GW additional wind by 2020 (0.8 facilitate wind (including connection to hydroelectric facilities; GW installed in 2007) tradable energy certificates Austria No information 78.1% of electricity output from renewables by 2010, Feed-in tariffs for 12 years, declining from full tariff after 10 10% from new renewable sources by 2010 years. Rate varies from year to year. Also, subsidies of 5.1 million over three years for new wind farms; tradable energy certificates Brazil 143.5 GW 928 MW additional wind by 2010, additional 3,300 Feed-in tariffs; some public investment MW from wind, small hydro, biomass by 2016 Belgium No information 6% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Capital subsidies, tax incentives, tradable energy certificates Canada Abundant 2.8 GW of installed wind by 2010; 12 GW by 2016 (4% 1¢/kWh premium for 10 years, plus construction subsidies and of electricity demand) provincial incentives (e.g., 11¢/kWh for renewable projects in Ontario) Chile Significant 15% of added power capacity from renewables during No payment of dispatching costs to system operator; 2006-2010; 257 projects considered exemption from transmission cost; $150,000 subsidy per project China 1,000 GW onshore; 10% of primary energy consumption from renewables Combination of regulation and concessions; feed-in tariffs, 300 GW offshore by 2010, 15% by 2020; installed wind capacity to capital subsidies, tax incentives; International subsidies under increase from 6 GW in 2007 to 30 GW by 2020 (5 GW Kyoto's CDM, 16.6 GW in CDM pipeline; CDM payment 9- to be added in 2008 alone) 11/tCO2. 100 MW projects, no turbines under 600 kW capacity Costa Rica Excellent; some of 49.5 MW to be installed under contracts by 2026 State ownership; some feed-in tariffs globe's highest winds Croatia No information 400 MW from renewables No information is available Cyprus No information 6% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Feed-in tariffs and capital subsidies for wind production Czech No information 5-6 % of TPES by 2010, 8-10% of TPES by 2020, 8% Feed-in tariffs for all renewables; capital subsidies, tax Republic of electricity output from renewables by 2010 incentives and tradable energy certificates Denmark Significant 29% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 June 2004 legislation; feed-in tariffs, market premium of 0.10 DKK (0.0134) per kWh, tax incentives, tradable energy certificates replaced by premium 15 Table 4. Continued Dominican No information 500 MW from renewables by 2015 No information is available Republic Egypt 20 GW 3% of electricity from renewables by 2010, 20% by Priority grid access; long-term contracts; price concessions 2020; 12% (7.2 MW installed capacity) from wind Estonia No information 5.1% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Feed-in tariffs and some tax incentives European Abundant 12% of total energy to come from renewables by 2010; Incentives vary among EU-27 countries, but include Union 20% by 2020; share in electricity to reach 21% by 2010 concessions for wind, tax incentives, subsidies, voluntary agreements, environmental taxes, tradable energy certificates Finland 300 MW onshore; 31.5% of electricity from renewables by 2010; 300 MW Capital subsidies, tax incentives and tradable energy 10,000 MW offshore of installed wind capacity by 2010 certificates France Abundant 21% of gross electricity by 2010; generation target of 25 Feed-in tariff of 8.2¢/kWh for 10 years; capital subsidies, tax GW (incl. 6 GW offshore) by 2020, with 4 GW offshore incentives, tradable energy certificates, public investment by 2015 Germany 45 GW onshore; 10 Already exceeds EU target for 2010 (12.5% of Feed-in tariffs of 8.19¢/kWh for 5 years (`initial') plus GW offshore electricity from renewables by 2010); 25-35% of energy 5.17¢/kWh for 20 years (basic); vary according to quality of from renewables by 2020 wind development. Preferential zoning. Subsidies for replacing old turbines with new and offshore construction. Offshore transmission connection to be paid by system operator (consumer). Greece Substantial 20.1% of electricity from renewables by 2010; 3,372 Feed-in tariffs for wind (amount not known), R&D subsidies, MW wind by 2010; already Crete grid >10% wind capital subsidies, tax credits India 65 GW Annual wind capacity additions of 2 GW over coming No national feed-in tariffs or quota; only tax incentives. States years use fee-in tariffs; 10 of 29 states require utilities to source 10% of power from renewable sources. Public investment, capital subsidies. Subsidies via CDM for 4.0 GW as of 2008. Hungary Unknown Must meet EU targets, 3.6% of electricity output from Feed-in tariff of 23.8 Ft/kWh (0.0985/kWh); costs are high; renewables by 2010, but National grid has limitations: require subsidies from the EU; tradable energy certificates 300 MW in 2010, 800 MW 2015 Iran 6.5 GW minimum, 500 MW installed wind capacity by 2010 (19 MW in Price guarantees for wind below payments for fossil fuel perhaps 30 GW 2007) generated power; to be changed. Ireland 179 GW 13.2% of electricity from renewables by 2010; 1.1 GW Fixed feed-in tariff for 15 years of installed wind capacity by 2010 (520 MW offshore) Israel No information 5% of electricity from renewables by 2016 Feed-in tariffs started in 2004 16 Table 4. Continued Italy 7,000 MW onshore 25% of electricity from renewables by 2010 (hydro, Feed-in tariff for wind replaced by quota and Green geothermal already contribute but are saturated; rely on certificates; feed-in tariff for solar remains. biomass and wind); 8 GW wind capacity by 2010 (2.7 GW in 2007); 12 GW by 2020 Japan Significant offshore 7% of total primary energy supply from renewables by Weak incentives and some obstacles to wind power and along coast, but 2010; 1.35% of generation capacity to come from wind development subject to typhoons by 2010; wind target of 3 GW installed by 2010 Jordan No information 15% of energy from renewables by 2020 No information is available Korea No information is 5% of energy from renewable sources by 2011, 10% by Public opposition to wind; no subsidies in place; eligible for available 2020; wind target of 2.25 GW installed by 2012 CDM subsidies Latvia Favorable 6% of TPES (excluding large hydro) by 2010, 49.3% of State funding to support of R&D electricity output from renewables by 2010; 500 MW of installed wind capacity, focus on offshore as winds average 5.7m/s Lithuania No information 12% of TPES by 2010, 7% of electricity output from 0.0637/kWh feed-in tariff (no time limit given) renewables by 2010; 200 MW wind capacity by 2010 Luxembourg No information 5.7% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Feed-in tariffs and some capital subsidies and tax incentives Mali No information 15% of electricity from renewables by 2020 Small subsidies for rural solar energy, but not wind energy Malta No information 5% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 some tax benefits to wind producers Mexico Tremendous Excluding large hydro, renewable generation to supply Long-term power purchase agreements; investments potential: 21+ GW 8% of energy by 2012; 404 MW of installed wind depreciated in one year capacity by 2017 Morocco Vast potential due to 10% of energy and 20% of electricity consumption from Preferential treatment of wind access to grid high wind speeds renewables by 2012; 1 GW installed capacity by 2012 along coast (est. cap. factor >40%) Netherlands 6,000 MW offshore, 5% of energy from renewables by 2010, 10% by 2020; Involved in offshore consortium with Germany and UK to 1,500 MW onshore 9% of electricity output by 2010; 20% of domestic integrate 2000 turbines into grids of these countries. No energy demand supplied by wind by 2020, 10% of information on subsidies available. primary energy from renewables by 2020 New Excellent 90% of electricity from renewable sources by 2025 Emissions trading scheme to include electricity sector in 2010 Zealand (65% currently, mostly hydro, 1.5% wind), 30 PJ of new favors renewables; some environmental opposition to wind. renewable capacity (including heat and transport fuels) by 2012 Nigeria No information 7% of power generation from renewables by 2025 No information is available 17 Table 4. Continued Norway High State-owned company seeks to install 1 GW wind Feed-in tariff of 8 øre /kWh (approx. 10/MWh) for 15 years; capacity and produce 3 TWh by 2010; no other targets for each øre above 45 øre/kWh, tariffs declines by 0.6 øre (1 as Norway highly reliant on hydropower NOK = 100 øre); capital subsidies; tradable energy certificates Pakistan No information 5% of power generation from renewables by 2030, Limited feed-in tariff at 9.5¢ per kWh 1,100 MW of wind power Peru No information 6,200 kW of installed wind capacity by 2014 No information is available. Philippines No information 4.7 GW installed capacity of renewables by 2013 Some tax credits and incentives; public investment Poland 13.5 GW onshore; 7.5% of total primary energy supply (TPES) from Power purchase obligation requires utilities to obtain 7.5% possible 2.0 GW renewables by 2010; 15% by 2020; 7.5% of electricity from renewables by 2010. Capital subsidies, tax incentives and offshore, but limited from renewables by 2010. Estimate: 2.5 GW by 2010, 5 public investment by protected areas GW by 2015, 12 GW by 2020 Portugal 700 GWh/year 3,750 MW of electricity generation from wind by 2010, More competition to promote wind by linking the grids of 5,100 MW by 2013, 45.6% of electricity output from Portugal and Spain; feed-in tariffs, capital subsidies, tradable renewables by 2010 energy certificates Russia 30,000 TWh/year No targets No information is available. (37% in Europe, 63% in Siberia/Far East) Singapore No information Installation of 50,000 m2 of solar thermal systems by No information is available. 2012; complete recovery of energy from municipal waste Slovakia No information 31% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Feed-in tariffs and tax credits; public investment Slovenia No information 33.6% of electricity output from renewables by 2010 Feed-in tariffs; no capital subsidies or tax incentives for wind Spain 40 MW onshore; 5 30.3% of electricity consumption from renewables and Wind producers choose: fixed tariff of 7.32¢/kWh reduced to MW offshore 29.4% from wind, with 20 GW installed capacity, by 6.12¢/kWh after 20 years, or premium of 2.93¢/kWh 2010 combined with cap (8.49¢/kWh) and floor (7.13¢/kWh) prices; tax credits and public investment are also used South Africa 32,228 MWh (5,000 10,000 GWh or 0.8 Mtoe renewable energy contribution No information is available. MWh national grid, to the final energy consumption by 2013 111 MWh rural min- grid, 1,117 MWh off- grid, 26,000 borehill windmills) Sri Lanka No information No target; potential is being examined. USAID funded wind mapping survey; feed-in tariffs Sweden No information 60% of electricity output from renewables by 2010, 10 Feed-in tariffs, tax incentives, capital subsidies, tradable TWh of electricity production from wind power by 2015 energy certificates; production support or environmental bonus (4 TWh onshore, 6 TWh offshore) that declines each year; easier certification of designated sites 18 Table 4. Continued Switzerland 4,000 GWh 3.5 TWh from electricity and heat by 2010 Feed-in tariffs; no capital subsidies or tax incentives for wind Taiwan 1 GW onshore; 2 328.96 MW in 3-phase wind power project by 2011 R&D is subsidized GW offshore Thailand No information 8% of total primary energy from renewables by 2011 Feed-in tariffs (but only for small power producers) began in (excluding traditional rural biomass) 2000; capital subsidies Tunisia 1 GW No target; 120 MW of installed capacity due by 2009 No information is available. Turkey 88 GW Projected shortfall in conventional generation. Feed-in tariffs of 5.0-5.5¢/kWh for 7 years; capital subsidies. 2% of electricity from wind by 2010 Guaranteed connection to national grid. Improved links with EU grids to stabilize power system. Ukraine 30 TWh/year (16-35 Targets set for 2050. Prediction: 11 GW of wind power No information is available. GW capacity) by 2030, wind generation to reach 42 TWh by 2050 United 30 GW offshore; 10% of electricity from renewables by 2010; 15% of all Renewable Obligation Certificate provides premium to bulk Kingdom onshore not provided energy by 2020 (13 GW onshore, 20 GW offshore wind electricity generated by large-scale operators; capital subsidies, capacity to meet 15% target) tax incentives, tradable energy certificates United Huge potential, Target under consideration: supply 20% of energy by Federal production tax credit of $0.02/kWh (adjusted for States >3,000 GW 2030 inflation) for wind generated power for 10 years. Some states aid in transmission planning. Uruguay No information 20 MW of electricity generation to come from wind Government decree in 2006 encourages development of wind power, with 10 MW from independent producers power Notes: a Wind potential is frequently described by terms such as `excellent', `significant', `abundant', `immense', `huge', `favorable' or `good'. No attempt is made to define these terms as they are the terms used in the publications to indicate wind potential. Clearly, the terminology suggests enthusiasm for the future of wind power development and that is how they should be interpreted. In other cases, actual capacity or production estimates are provided, while in some no information could be found in the original source. b TPES stands for total primary energy supply Sources: Martinot (2005), Martinot (2006), IEA (2006a, b), World Energy Council (2007), OECD and IEA (2008). 19 Fiscal instruments are the policy instruments most commonly used to support wind power. In the United States, for example, a wind energy production tax credit (PTC) is used to encourage investment in wind generating capacity. The PTC provides an income tax credit of 2.0¢ per kWh for production of electricity from wind and other renewable sources. It is adjusted annually for inflation, is in effect for the first ten years of production, but applies only to large-scale power producers and not the installation of small turbines for individual use (see Steve, Severn and Raum 2008). India also promotes growth in its wind industry by supplying generous tax credits to the private sector (Martinot, 2002). Other countries provide feed-in tariffs or tax incentives amounting to 1.5¢ (in U.S. funds) to 10¢ or more per kWh delivered to the grid; the length of time a project can collect such payments varies, and downward sliding payment scale is common. 7. Integration of Wind Power into Electricity Grids Intermittency is the greatest obstacle to the seamless integration of wind generated power into electrical grids. When there is no wind, no power is generated; the wind comes and goes, and does not always blow with the same intensity (Scott 2007). Like solar PV or run-of-the-river hydro, wind power enters an electrical grid whenever there is an adequate amount of the resource available for generating electricity, but, unlike run-of-river hydro, the supply of wind power will fluctuate more than that of traditional thermal or large hydro generating sources that serve base load and are dispatched according to electricity demand. The intermittent nature of wind gives rise to two types of indirect costs: (i) the costs of additional system reserves to cover intermittency, and (ii) the extra costs associated with balancing or managing an electricity system when power from one (or more) generation sources fluctuates. Consider first the issue of system reserves. By installing wind generating capacity, greater system balancing reserves are required than would normally be the case if an equivalent amount of thermal or hydro capacity were installed, even after adjusting for the lower capacity factors associated with wind (Gross et al, 2003, 2006; Kennedy, 2005). The reliability of power from wind farms due to a high variability in wind is lower than that of thermal or hydro sources of power and must be compensated for by greater system reserves. 20 Suppose that s and d are the standard deviations of supply and demand fluctuations, respectively. Then, as a rule of thumb, a system operator requires reserves equal to three standard deviations of all potential fluctuations, or reserves = ±3 s2 d2 (see Gross et al., 2006, 2007; DeCarolis and Keith, 2005). If wind farms are added to an existing grid, required reserves must be increased to ±3 s2 d2 w , where w is the standard deviation associated 2 with wind intermittency. If w > s and wind replaces other generation that is more reliable, then reserves must increase; if w < s, reserve capacity would decline. How large must the additional reserves be? According to Gross et al. (2006, 2007), assuming no correlation between demand and variable supply from wind, additional reserve requirements would be small. Based on empirical wind data, they estimate that the standard deviations of wind fluctuations amount to 1.4% of installed wind capacity for a 30-minute time horizon (regulating or fast-response reserve) and 9.3% of installed capacity over a four-hour time period (contingency or standing reserve). Assume 10 GW of installed wind capacity, w = 140 MW for regulating and w = 930 MW for contingency reserves, and total generating capacity of 24.3 GW. Then, if s+d = 340 MW, regulating reserves would need to equal 1020 MW (= 3 × 340 2 ) without wind and 1181 MW (=3× 340 2 140 2 ) with wind, while respective contingency reserves would need to be 6780 MW and 7332 MW. Thus, wind intermittency requires increases in regulating reserves of 15.8% (161 MW) and contingency reserves of 8.1% (552 MW). 6 Although this might be considered a small addition to overall reserves, the financial implications are significant In addition to the need for greater system reserves, there is a second cost associated with the need to retain system balance, the added cost of managing the grid (Lund, 2005). How the grid is to be managed depends on the policy implemented by the authority. If the grid operator is required to take any wind power that is offered, wind power is then non- dispatchable, or `must run'. In that case, existing generators may need to operate at below optimal capacity, while ready to dispatch power to the grid in the event of a decline in wind 6 These are the current authors' calculations using values from Gross et al (2007). Although not given, total generating capacity is approximately 24.3 GW. However, there is no discussion in Gross et al. (2006, 2007) as to whether wind generating capacity simply replaces conventional generating capacity, yet this seems to be the logical assumption based on the discussion found in these sources. Our analysis suggests that this is a highly optimistic analysis of wind power. 21 availability. Peak-load diesel and simple (open-cycle) gas plants and, to a much lesser degree, combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plants are able to ramp up and down to some extent in order to follow fluctuations in wind power availability. With non-dispatchable wind power entering a grid, there is an economic cost because peak-load and load-following generators operate more often below their optimal efficiency ratings (less than their optimal instantaneous capacity factors) ­ wind variability causes peak-load diesel and open-cycle gas plants to stop and start more frequently, which increases O&M costs. Furthermore, the grid operator is often required to sell excess power to another operator, usually at low cost. This is the case in Denmark, for example, where the `must-run' requirement for both wind and CHP generated power requires the operator to export large amounts of electricity, especially at night when load is low and CHP and wind power might be high (Pitt et al., 2005). This problem is exacerbated as wind penetration increases, particularly if the load remaining when wind generated power is subtracted exceeds the output of base-load power plants. Coal-fired power plants can ramp down only very slightly at night (when load is low and wind power might become available) so they can return to full operation during the day, although costs of operating below optimal capacity are generally high. (They can reduce output quickly only by venting steam, which can lower heat by hundreds of degrees Celsius, but at very high cost to equipment.) Nuclear power plants cannot ramp up and down over the time frames under consideration. Thus, whenever wind power is available excess power from base-load generators must be sold into another grid, perhaps displacing renewable energy production in some other jurisdiction (e.g., where no `must-run' requirement exists). 7 If wind penetration is high, management of the grid may become especially problematic if wind resources are designated `must-run' or non-dispatchable (Liik et al., 2003; Lund, 2005; Pitt et al., 2005). The indirect grid management costs are likely the highest costs associated with wind energy (Prescott et al., 2007; Maddaloni, Rowe and van Kooten, 2008a, 2008b), although this certainly warrants further investigation. While this problem could be mitigated by storage of wind power, no viable large-scale storage systems are currently available. Because of the storage problem associated with the intermittency of supply, wind power is used most effectively in electricity grids that have 7 Surprisingly, there are no studies of which we are aware that have examined the economics of displaced power in other jurisdictions. 22 large hydropower capacity. In that case, water can be stored in reservoirs by withholding hydroelectricity from the grid when non-dispatchable wind power is produced, but releasing water and generating electricity when there is no wind power. This is precisely what happens with wind power in Denmark, where hydro reservoirs in Norway provide de facto storage (White, 2004; Lund, 2005), while lack of storage and/or connections to a larger market make wind power a less attractive option in Ireland and Estonia (Liik et al., 2003; ESB, 2004). An alternative policy is to make wind power dispatchable by requiring wind operators to reduce output (by `feathering' wind turbines or simply stopping blades from rotating) whenever the grid operator is unable to absorb the extra electricity. In this case, output from base-load plants is effectively given precedence over wind generated power because such plants cannot be ramped up and down, the ramping costs are too great, and/or excess power cannot be stored or sold. (In Alberta, for example, further expansion of wind farms was permitted only after developers agreed to control power output so that wind power was no longer `must run'.) This policy makes investments in wind farms must less attractive as it increases costs, and is usually unacceptable to environmental groups as it is perceived as a waste of renewable energy. Nonetheless, it might be the only way in which a grid can be managed to include wind power, especially as wind penetration levels increase. One argument used to minimize intermittency and storage concerns relates to the placement of wind farms. If wind farms are placed over a large geographic area, then, for the same installed wind power capacity, the output would be smoother than if it were to come from a wind farm at a single site. Therefore, to overcome variability, it is necessary to locate wind farms across as large a geographic areas as possible and integrate their combined output into a large grid. By establishing wind farms across the entire country, onshore and offshore, the United Kingdom hopes to minimize the problems associated with intermittency. In addition, by connecting all countries of Europe and placing wind farms throughout the continent as well as in Britain and Ireland, the hope is to increase the ability to employ wind generated power. Unfortunately, as demonstrated by Oswald, Raine, and Ashraf-Ball (2008), large weather systems can influence the British Isles and the European continent simultaneously. They demonstrate that at 18:00 hours on February 2, 2006, electricity demand in the United Kingdom peaked, but wind power was zero (indeed wind farms added to the load at that time). At the same time, wind power output in Germany, Spain and Ireland was 23 also extremely low ­ 4.3%, 2.2% and 10.6% of capacities, respectively. Thus, even a super grid with many wind farms scattered over a large landscape cannot avoid the problems associated with intermittency, including the need to manage delivery of power from various non-wind power generators. The challenge to integrate wind energy into existing electricity grids depends on several factors, such as the availability of suitable sites for wind farms, the generation mix of the electricity grid, and government policies to support wind power. The best sites are those located on land where wind turbines least interfere with other land uses, where noise and visual externalities are minimal, and where the effect on wildlife is small. Sites should be scattered over a sufficiently large area so that they are not affected by the same weather patterns ­ so that the correlation of low wind among sites is minimal. Further, wind sites need to be connected to a transmission grid, and if such a grid does not exist in close proximity, the costs for deploying wind power become exceedingly large. 8. Climate Change and Wind Power Climate change initiatives have done much to promote wind energy over the past decade both in developed and developing countries. In the developed countries, fiscal policies and regulatory mandates enacted to meet Kyoto commitments have promoted wind power. In the developing countries, the Clean Development Mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol has played a catalytic role. Various international organizations, particularly the World Bank Group and the United Nations' Development Program (UNDP), have also contributed significantly to the financing of wind power projects through the Global Environmental Facility (GEF). As can be seen from Table 4, many developed countries have set targets for developing wind power along with other renewable energy sources. In choosing targets and policies, countries take into account a variety of considerations including climate change mitigation goals and obligations. For example, Australia is planning to install 10 GW of wind power capacity by 2020; Canada is planning to have 12 GW of wind capacity by 2016; Japan, Italy and Spain are planning to have 3 GW, 8 GW and 20 GW, respectively, of wind power capacity by 2010. In developing countries, the CDM has played an instrumental role in implementing wind power projects. By early 2009, 180 wind power projects with a combined 24 capacity of 7,763 MW were registered under the CDM. An additional 441 projects with a combined capacity of 16,883 MW are in the process of registration (see Table 5). While these projects are distributed across the globe, about 90% of the total projects with about 85% of the total capacity are concentrated in China and India. China alone accounts for almost 60% of total installed capacity. Mexico, South Korea and Brazil account for the bulk of the remaining projects. Table 5. CDM Wind Projects Total projects Country (already registered and in process) Registered projects Projects (No.) Capacity (MW) Projects (No.) Capacity (MW) China 303 16,452 91 4,583 India 258 4,741 62 1,484 Mexico 12 1,272 6 958 Brazil 11 687 4 166 South Korea 10 314 4 156 Cyprus 4 207 2 44 Dominican Republic 3 173 1 65 Egypt 3 285 1 120 Philippines 2 73 1 33 Morocco 2 70 2 70 Costa Rica 2 69 1 20 Nicaragua 2 60 0 0 Panama 1 81 0 0 Mongolia 1 50 0 0 Jamaica 1 21 1 21 Colombia 1 20 1 20 Israel 1 12 1 12 Argentina 1 11 1 11 Chile 1 19 0 0 Vietnam 1 30 0 0 Ecuador 1 2 1 2 Total 621 24,646 180 7,763 Source: URC (2009a). Wind power projects account for approximately 14% of the total CDM projects already registered or in the pipeline. In terms of GHG mitigation, these projects share 9% of annual potential (see Table 6). In addition to CDM projects, 18 wind energy projects were being implemented in economies in transition by early 2009 under Kyoto's joint implementation mechanism (URC, 2009b). 25 Table 6. CDM Projects Registered and in the Process of Registration Total Project type (registered and in process) Registered Project '000 CERs Project '000 CERs No. % No. % No. % No. % Renewables 2,747 63 228,142 38 785 60 53,312 22 Hydro 1,150 26 118,015 20 287 22 19,722 8 Biomass energy 660 15 39,996 7 236 18 13,266 5 Wind 621 14 53,412 9 180 14 15,847 7 Biogas 275 6 13,242 2 70 5 2,528 1 Solar 27 1 704 0.1 4 0.3 43 0.02 Geothermal 13 0.3 2,457 0.4 7 1 1,590 1 Tidal 1 0.02 315 0.1 1 0.1 315 0.1 Methane, Cement & Coal mine 682 16 103,769 17 262 20 41,067 17 Supply-side energy efficiency 451 10 76,968 13 105 8 17,858 7 Demand-side energy efficiency 203 5 7,753 1 52 4 1,634 1 Fuel switching 139 3 44,226 7 35 3 13,077 5 HFCs, PFCs & N2O reduction 97 2 132,747 22 58 4 115,980 48 Afforestation & Reforestation 36 1 1,888 0.3 1 0.1 26 0.01 Transport 9 0.2 981 0.2 2 0.2 288 0.1 Total 4,364 100 596,473 100 1,300 100 243,242 100 Note: CER refers to certified emission reduction units, 1 CER = 1 tons of CO2 equivalent Source: URC (2009a). 9. Concluding Remarks This study presents the current status and future prospects of wind power at the global level, considering various aspects such as resource potential, installed capacity, economics, financing, physical barriers, intermittency, grid interconnections, and policies related to climate change. We find that global wind power generation capacity expanded rapidly from only 10 MW in 1980 to 94,124 MW by the end of 2007, with an average annual growth rate of about 40%. The growth is also facilitated by the improving economics of wind power as it is becoming increasingly competitive with traditional sources of electricity generation, such as coal, gas, hydro and nuclear. Despite the phenomenal growth of installed capacity, however, wind power still accounted for only 1% of global electricity supply as of 2007. Moreover, the distribution of installed capacity and ongoing investment are preponderantly concentrated in developed countries, with the exception of China and India. Existing studies 26 estimate that wind power could account for 7% to 34% of the global electricity supply by 2050. The ability to continue expansion of wind power will depend, however, on the specific circumstances facing a country or region, such as the generation mix of the grid to which wind will be connected, the distance between wind farms and the nearest grid connection, economic incentives, and institutional support. It also depends on prices of improvements in wind technology, fossil fuels, economic and political developments surrounding nuclear power, and the cost and availability of other renewable sources of energy. Wind power faces a large number of technical, financial, economic, institutional, market and other barriers. The intermittent nature of wind power and the relative remoteness of locations where wind resources normally exist are key technical and economic barriers. Relatively higher upfront capital costs and lack of access to financing, especially in developing countries, are some key financial barriers. To overcome these barriers, many developed countries have introduced a variety of policy instruments, the most common of which are capital subsidies, tax incentives and feed-in tariffs. However, existing policy instruments alone are not adequate to increase significantly the share of wind power in the global electricity supply mix. To accomplish this, new and innovative policy instruments and strong institutional support would be necessary, as well as further advance in wind technology to lower its cost at larger scales of supply. Climate change mitigation initiatives, particularly the Kyoto commitments and the flexibility mechanisms under the Kyoto Protocol, play pivotal roles in promoting wind power. In order to meet their Kyoto commitments, many developed countries have set domestic targets for wind power expansion, while developing countries are actively investing in wind power projects using funds available through the clean development mechanism. As of June 2008, wind power projects with a combined capacity of close to 8 GW had already been registered under the CDM and an additional almost 17 GW are in the process. Moreover, more stringent GHG mitigation targets beyond 2012 will likely help accelerate the expansion of wind power across the globe. The paper does address the normative question of how much additional investment in wind capacity should be undertaken by developing countries, and through what means. We can observe that without efforts to lower institutional, regulatory and financing barriers, even cost-effective investments in wind capacity are impeded. 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