Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wind energy posts a ‘banner’ 2020 in US

- Elinor Aspegren USA TODAY

The wind energy sector in the U.S. blew away records in 2020.

A study from the American Clean Power Associatio­n released this month reports that 2020 was a record year for the industry, with developers adding enough megawatts of capacity to provide power for millions of homes and inching the U.S. closer to the Biden administra­tion’s goal of carbon neutrality by 2035.

In all, 16,913 megawatts of new wind power capacity was installed in the U.S. last year – an 85% increase over 2019. That’s the equivalent of the power generated from 11 large coal plants, and enough to serve nearly 6 million homes, Jonathan Naughton, a professor of mechanical engineerin­g and director of the Wind Energy Research Center at the University of Wyoming, told USA TODAY.

Texas hosted the most activity with 13% of energy output, followed by Wyoming (10%), Oklahoma (7%), Kansas (5%) and New Mexico (4%).

“2020 was a banner year for the wind industry,” Heather Zichal, president and CEO of American Clean Power, formerly the American Wind Energy Associatio­n, said in a statement. “Despite all the challenges COVID-19 placed on our businesses, we still shattered nearly every record for capacity and growth.”

Texas: Wind power ‘driving significant economic growth’

Wind power produced up to two-thirds of Texas’s energy output in 2020, according to the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. In total, the Lone Star State generated about 29,407 megawatts of wind power, installing 2,197 MWs in 2020 – meaning if Texas were a country, it would rank fifth in the world for wind power capacity, some estimates say.

“Texas is the number one energy consumer in the country. Our economy and continued growth are dependent on reliable power, and how we meet this massive demand has tremendous implicatio­ns,” Powering

Texas stated on its website. “Renewable energy is helping Texas meet this growing demand for energy, while also providing jobs, bolstering rural economies and supporting communitie­s all across the state.”

Wyoming: Iimproving political climate for wind energy?

Wyoming is an interestin­g place for wind energy – it’s the No. 1 producer for coal in the country, said Naughton.

“Wind energy is always looked at as a threat to the coal industry,” he said.

But in 2020, the state nearly doubled its wind capacity for power, adding nearly 900 MWs over the past year. That signals to Naughton that the political climate for wind power is improving in the Cowboy State.

But Naughton and other experts cautioned people shouldn’t take the burst in Wyoming’s wind developmen­t as a trend from year to year. The Industrial Siting Council, the regulatory board charged with reviewing big wind project applicatio­ns in the state, hasn’t received a new proposal for a wind project since 2019, the Star-Tribune reported.

How close is US to carbon neutrality?

Despite the wind energy industry’s gains in 2020, the U.S. remains far from carbon neutrality by 2035, a main goal in the Biden administra­tion’s climate plan.

“We have a policy push to do it. And we also have an economic push to do it. So the pieces are in place,” Naughton said. “We’ve just got to make sure it actually happens.”

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