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from GWEC.net: The booming wind energy markets around the world exceeded expectations in 2006, with the sector experiencing yet another record year. On the day of the publication of the 4th Assessment Report on Climate Change by the IPCC, the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) released its annual figures for 2006. These figures, which include wind energy developments in more than 70 countries around the world, show that the year saw the installation of 15,197 megawatts (MW), taking the total installed wind energy capacity to 74,223 MW, up from 59,091 MW in 2005.
Despite constraints facing supply chains for wind
turbines, the annual market for wind continued to increase at the
staggering rate of 32% following the 2005 record year, in which the
market grew by 41%. This development shows that the global wind energy
industry is responding fast to the challenge of manufacturing at the
required level, and manages to deliver sustained growth.
In terms of economic value, the wind energy sector
has now become firmly installed as one of the important players in the
energy markets, with the total value of new generating equipment
installed in 2006 reaching 18 billion, or US$23 billion.
The countries with the highest total installed
capacity are Germany (20,621 MW), Spain (11,615 MW), the USA (11,603
MW), India (6,270 MW) and Denmark (3,136). Thirteen countries around
the world can now be counted among those with over 1000 MW of wind
capacity, with France and Canada reaching this threshold in 2006.
In terms of new installed capacity in 2006, the US
continued to lead with 2,454 MW, followed by Germany (2,233 MW), India
(1,840 MW), Spain (1,587 MW), China (1,347 MW) and France (810 MW).
This development shows that new players such as France and China are
gaining ground.
The tremendous growth in 2006 shows that decision
makers are starting to take seriously the benefits that wind energy
development can bring. However, we must not forget that wind energy is
a new technology that needs robust policy frameworks and political
commitment to fulfill its full potential, said Arthouros Zervos,
Chairman of GWEC.
Europe is still leading the market with 48,545 MW
of installed capacity at the end of 2006, representing 65% of the
global total. In 2006, the European wind capacity grew by 19%,
producing approximately 100 TWh of electricity, equal to 3.3% of total
EU electricity consumption in an average wind year.
While Germany and Spain still represent 50% of the
EU market, we are seeing a healthy trend towards less reliance on these
two countries. In the EU, 3,755 MW were installed outside of Germany,
Spain and Denmark in 2006. In 2002, this figure still stood at only 680
MW, said Christian Kjaer, the European Wind Energy Associations
(EWEA) CEO. The figures clearly confirm that a second wave of European
countries is investing in wind power.
Despite the continuing growth in Europe, the
general trend shows that the sector is gradually becoming less reliant
on a few key markets, and other regions are starting to catch up with
Europe. The growth in the European market in 2006 accounted for about
half of the total new capacity, down from nearly three quarters in
2004.
Asia has experienced the strongest increase in
installed capacity outside of Europe, with an addition of 3,679 MW,
taking the continent over 10,600 MW. In 2006, the continent grew by 53%
and accounted for 24% of new installations. The strongest market here
remains India with over 1,840 MW of new installed capacity, which takes
its total figure up to 6,270 MW.
China more than doubled its total installed
capacity by installing 1,347 MW of wind energy in 2006, a 70% increase
from last years figure. This brings China up to 2,604 MW of capacity,
making it the sixth largest market world wide. The Chinese market was
boosted by the countrys new Renewable Energy Law, which entered into
force on 1 January 2006.
Thanks to the Renewable Energy law, the Chinese
market has grown substantially in 2006, and this growth is expected to
continue and speed up. According to the list of approved projects and
those under construction, more than 1,500 MW will be installed in 2007.
The goal for wind power in China by the end of 2010 is 5,000 MW, which
according to our estimations will already be reached well ahead of
time, said Li Junfeng of the Chinese Renewable Energy Industry
Association (CREIA).
22% of the worlds new wind capacity was installed
in North America, where the annual market increased by a third in 2005,
gaining momentum in both the US and Canada.
For the second year running, the US wind energy
industry installed nearly 2,500 MW, making it the country with the most
new wind power.
Strong growth figures in the US prove that wind is
now a mainstream option for new power generation, said Randy Swisher,
President of the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). Winds
exponential growth reflects the nations increasing demand for clean,
safe and domestic energy, and continues to attract both private and
public sources of capital. New generating capacity worth US$4 billion
was installed in 2006, billing wind as one of the largest sources of
new power generation in the country second only to natural gas for
the second year in a row.
Canada also had a record year, with the installed
capacity more than doubling from 683 MW in 2005 to 1459 MW at the end
of 2006. Wind energy is an emerging Canadian success story and 2006
will be remembered as the year that our country first began to
seriously capture its economic and environmental benefits, said Robert
Hornung, President of the Canadian Wind Energy Association (CanWEA).
Canadas is on the cusp of a wind energy boom as provincial
governments are now targeting to have a minimum of 10,000 MW of
installed wind energy capacity in place by 2015.
Growth in the relatively young African and Middle
Eastern market picked up considerably in 2006, with 172 MW of new
installed capacity, bringing the total up to 441 MW. This represents a
63% growth, and should be seen as a promising signs for future
developments. The main countries experiencing growth are Egypt (230 MW,
up from 145 MW), Morocco (124 MW, up from 64 MW) and Iran (48 MW, up
from 23 MW).
Compared to previous years, the Australian market
only experienced slow growth in 2006. "While 2006 saw only 109 MW
installed bring total capacity to 817 MW, the Australian market has
been given a new lease of life with the introduction of state based
renewable energy targets providing a more positive outlook for 2007,"
said Dominique La Fontaine, CEO of the Australian Wind Energy
Association (Auswind).
As security of energy supply and climate change
are ranging high on the political agendas of the worlds governments,
wind energy has already become a mainstream energy source in many
countries around the world. Wind energy is clean and fuel-free, which
makes it the most attractive solution to the worlds energy
challenges, said Arthouros Zervos, Chairman of GWEC.
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