Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WIND, SOLAR projects lose their momentum.

Wind, solar projects down worldwide

- CATHY BUSSEWITZ, JOHN FLESHER AND PATRICK WHITTLE

NEW YORK — The U.S. renewable-energy industry is reeling from the new coronaviru­s pandemic, which has delayed constructi­on, put thousands of skilled laborers out of work, and sowed doubts about solar and wind projects on the drawing board.

In locked-down California, some local agencies that issue permits for new work closed temporaril­y, and some solar companies furloughed installers.

In New York and New Jersey, SunPower CEO Thomas Werner halted installati­on of more than 400 residentia­l solar systems, fearing for his workers’ safety.

As many as 120,000 jobs in solar and 35,000 in wind could be lost, trade groups say.

“There are many smaller companies going out of business as we speak,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n. “Up to half our jobs are at risk.”

Leaders are confident that the future is bright. But the worldwide slowdown is delaying a transition to cleaner energy that scientists say is not happening quickly enough to curtail climate change.

Even as some states move toward reopening, executives fear diminished incomes and work disrupted by layoffs and social distancing will do lasting damage.

The wind industry is plagued by slowdowns in obtaining parts from overseas, getting them to job sites and constructi­ng new turbines.

“The industry was on a tremendous roll right up until the last month or two,” said Tom Kiernan, CEO of the American Wind Energy Associatio­n. “That reversal is stunning and problemati­c.”

Residentia­l solar business has been hit especially hard, Hopper said, with door-todoor sales no longer feasible and potential customers watching their wallets. Deals with commercial buyers also have slumped.

New solar installati­ons could be 17% lower worldwide than expected this year, and wind turbine manufactur­ing could fall up to 20%, according to consulting firm Wood Mackenzie.

“Pre-pandemic, there were great dreams and aspiration­s for a record-setting year,” said Paul Gaynor, CEO of Longroad Energy, a utility-scale wind and solar developer. “I’m sure we’re not going to have that.”

Fossil fuels such as natural gas and coal remain the leading providers of the nation’s electricit­y, with nuclear power another key contributo­r, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

But renewable sources — wind, solar, hydroelect­ric, biomass and geothermal — have jumped in the past decade as production costs have fallen and many states have ordered utilities to make greater use of renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Renewables produced nearly one-fifth of the country’s energy last year.

The Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion predicts that renewable energy, despite recent setbacks, will grow 11% this year — an indication of the sector’s strong surge before the economy tanked. Meanwhile, coal-fired power is expected to decline 20% and gas generation to grow just 1%.

The setback for renewable energy still has been painful — even in California, where residentia­l solar demand took off because of frequent blackouts and state laws requiring new homes to produce as much energy as they consume.

“A lot of companies are just trying everything they can to just limp along and keep their workforce,” said Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the California Solar and Storage Associatio­n.

Still, there are hopeful signs. The Boston-based developer Longroad recently began a utility-scale solar project in California and secured new financing for another in Texas.

Sunnova Energy Internatio­nal, a Houston-based residentia­l solar and energy storage service provider, is doing more videoconfe­rencing and fewer in-person dealings with customers. But CEO John Berger said, “our installati­ons are still moving ahead, service is still moving ahead, we still see customers paying us.”

In eastern Kansas, constructi­on has continued at Southern Power’s 200-megawatt Reading Wind Facility despite delayed parts shipments, company spokeswoma­n Helen Northcutt White said. Sixty-two turbines are planned for the facility, scheduled to go online in mid-May.

The wind and solar industries have asked lawmakers and federal agencies for help, including an extension of their four-year deadlines for completing projects without losing tax benefits. Similar assistance was granted during the 2008-09 recession.

 ?? (AP/Ben Margot) ?? Gen Nashimoto installs solar panels last week in Hayward, Calif. More photos at arkansason­line.com/53renewabl­e/.
(AP/Ben Margot) Gen Nashimoto installs solar panels last week in Hayward, Calif. More photos at arkansason­line.com/53renewabl­e/.

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