Wind Energy Faq's

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Wind Energy Faq's

Does the wind industry depend on government subsidies? Although electricity produced by wind is supported by governments, oil, gas, coal and nuclear all receive subsidies, and, despite having been subsidised for more than 50 years, continue to get substantially more than wind.

The International Energy Agency’s 2011 World Energy Outlook shows that in 2010, renewables got just $1 for every $6-7 given by governments to fossil fuels. “Fossil fuels [are] still receiving four times the level of subsidies [as renewable energy]”, European Commission said in 2011 (in the Communication: “Renewable Energy: Progressing towards the 2020 target”.) The IEA goes forecasts that government support for renewables will increase to $250 billion in 2035. That is still – a quarter of a century in the future – less than half of the sum being doled out to fossil fuels today. The UK has now set aside £54bn for decommissioning its nuclear power stations – enough to pay for wind turbines to produce 40 percent of UK’s power demand. What happens when the wind stops blowing? The power system operator constantly matches the electricity generation available to electricity demand. No power plant is 100 per cent reliable, and wind power is variable but predictable, allowing hours or even days for system operators to compensate for changing wind conditions. The power grid is designed to cope with power plants shutting down unexpectedly; wind energy is often referred to as ‘intermittent’, but ‘variable’ is a much better word. What is ‘intermittent’ is a nuclear power plant which can (and often does) go from 1,000 MW of production to zero in less than one second; that will never happen with wind power.


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