IEA: Wind power seen generating up to 18% of global power by 2050
Ανάρτηση:
Mavromatidis Dimitrios
την
24 Οκτ 2013
Wind power could generate up to 18% of world’s electricity by 2050, compared with 2.6% today, the new report Technology Roadmap: Wind Energy – 2013 Edition
finds. The nearly 300 gigawatts of current wind power worldwide must
increase eight- to ten-fold to achieve the roadmap’s vision, with the
more than USD 78 billion in investment in 2012 progressively reaching
USD 150 billion per year.
The report, an update of a
document first published in 2009, envisages a much larger penetration of
wind power than the 12% share on global electricity generation by 2050
considered in the first roadmap. It sees China overtaking OECD Europe as
the leading producer of wind power by 2020 or 2025, with the United
States ranked third. Wind power deployment under this vision would save
up to 4.8 gigatonnes of CO2 emissions per year by 2050, with
China providing by far the largest reductions. The reduction is
equivalent to more than the current European Union annual emissions.
Recent improvement in wind
power technologies as well as the changing global energy context explain
the higher long-term target. Turbines are getting higher, stronger and
lighter, while masts and blades are growing even faster than rated
capacity, allowing turbines to capture lower-speed winds and produce
more regular output. This facilitates installation in places beyond the
best windy spots on mountain ridges or seashores as well as integration
into power systems despite the variability of winds.
The cost of land-based wind
power is close to competitive with other sources of electricity in an
increasing set of circumstances. In some countries such as Brazil, wind
power has prevailed over fossil alternatives in auctions for long-term
power purchases, thanks to the hedge it provides against possible future
price increases for fossil fuels. Offshore wind power remains expensive
and technically challenging today, but has an important long-term
potential. The roadmap lists the actions – by governments, industry,
research centres, etc. – to target a reduction in wind power costs of
25% on land and 45% offshore by 2050.
But several obstacles could
delay progress, including financing, grid integration issues and
difficulties with permits and public acceptance. To achieve high
penetrations of variable wind power without diminishing system
reliability, improvements are needed in grid infrastructure and in the
flexibility of power systems as well as in the design of electricity
markets. However, some European countries already draw 15% to 30% of
their electricity from wind power, thanks to improvements in
forecasting, increased interconnections, demand-side response and
storage. The roadmap identifies those challenges and proposes a set of
actions to overcome them.
To download the free report, please click here.
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