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Capacity Factor Summary 1. Note: Figure only includes the 20 countries with the most installed wind capacity at the end of 2007 Wind as a Percentage of.

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Presentation on theme: "Capacity Factor Summary 1. Note: Figure only includes the 20 countries with the most installed wind capacity at the end of 2007 Wind as a Percentage of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Capacity Factor Summary 1

2 Note: Figure only includes the 20 countries with the most installed wind capacity at the end of 2007 Wind as a Percentage of Electricity Consumption Source: Wind Powering America update 2-3-09 2

3 Where in AZ? 3

4 Arizona Map NAU State NAU Army NAU Loan TEP UWRAP/TEP 4

5 Black & Veatch Arizona Renewable Energy Assessment, 2007 –APS, TEP, SRP –Near term –Transmission >69 kV –Land use –Constructability 991 MW 5 Source: Arizona Renewable Energy Assessment, Final Report, Project Numbe 145888, Black & Veatch, 2007

6 Windy = Class 3 or better “Developable” = Remove land not suitable for wind development NAU Wind Assessment 6

7 Construction Phase: 428 new jobs $49.6 M to local economies Operational Phase: 15 local jobs $3.2 M/yr to local economies Wind energy’s economic “ripple effect” Construction Phase = 1-2 years Operational Phase = 20+ years Total economic benefit = $164.9 million New local jobs during construction = 495 New local long-term jobs = 21 to 30 Direct Impacts Indirect & Induced Impacts Totals (construction + 20yrs) As computed by K. Wadsack at NAU using the NREL “Jobs and Economic Development Impacts” (JEDI) model. Slide from the Wind Powering America update 2-09. Arizona – Economic Impacts from 100 MW of new wind development in Coconino County Construction Phase: 67 new jobs $32.7 M to local economies Construction workers, management, administrative, gas and gas station workers, etc. Operational Phase: 6 to 15 new long-term jobs $0.93 M/yr to local economies O&M Jobs, road maintenance, hardware store, supply parts, etc. Supporting businesses, such as contractors, equipment suppliers of subcomponents, grocery store clerks, retail sales, etc.

8 Wind Energy’s Economic impacts On-site direct, off-site direct, Indirect, Induced Indirect Impacts These are jobs in and payments made to supporting businesses, such as bankers financing the construction, contractor, manufacturers and equipment suppliers of subcomponents. Induced Impacts These jobs and earnings result from the spending by people directly and indirectly supported by the project, including benefits to grocery store clerks, retail salespeople and child care providers. Wind energy’s economic “ripple effect” On-siteOff-site Construction workers Management Administrativ e support Boom truck & management, gas and gas station workers, blades and towers & workers Cement truck drivers, road crews, maintenance workers Hardware store purchases and workers, spare parts and their suppliers Direct Impacts

9 Payments to Landowners: $2.5 Million/yr Local Property Tax Revenue: $4.6 Million/yr Construction Phase: 912 new jobs $133.6 M to local economies Operational Phase: 181 new long-term jobs $19.3 M/yr to local economies Construction Phase: 807 new jobs $92.7 M to local economies Operational Phase: 129 local jobs $15.6 M/yr to local economies Wind energy’s economic “ripple effect” Construction Phase = 1-2 years Operational Phase = 20+ years Total economic benefit = $924.3 million New local jobs during construction = 1,719 New local long-term jobs = 310 Direct ImpactsIndirect & Induced Impacts Totals (construction + 20yrs) All jobs rounded to the nearest 50 jobs; All values greater than $10 million are rounded to the nearest million Colorado – Economic Impacts from 1000 MW of new wind development

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11 11 Source: Wind Powering America Update, 2-09

12 Note: Includes 227 projects built from 1983-2007, totaling ~13 GW (77% of capacity at end of 2007); additional ~2.8 GW of projects proposed for installation in 2008 Increase of ~$700/kW Installed Project Costs Are On the Rise, After a Long Period of Decline Source: Wind Powering America update 2-3-09 12

13 Comparative Generation Costs Source: Wind Powering America update 2-3-09 13

14 Installed Wind Capacity Source: Wind Powering America update 2-3-09 14

15 Installed Capacity in US 15

16 16 Velocity Stream Lines and Terrain Contour

17 Wind and Saline Water 17

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22 22

23 Outline Announcements Syllabus Wind Powering America Update Break Energy in the Wind Wind Turbine Technology Wind Energy Resource Wind Integration Wind Modeling 23

24 24 swrec.org

25 Announcements Arizona Wind Working Group Meeting –September 10, 10am -12pm at the Drury Inn Conference Facilities –http://wind.nau.edu/azwwg/http://wind.nau.edu/azwwg/ –To register, RSVP to Pat.Ponce@nau.eduPat.Ponce@nau.edu Tour of Dry Lake Wind Farm: Cost $60. Register at http://swrec.org/tours_and_events.html http://swrec.org/tours_and_events.html SWREC http://swrec.org/schedule.htmlhttp://swrec.org/schedule.html SWREC Volunteer: Contact Karin Wadsack SWREC Green Jobs Seminar 25

26 Syllabus Handout and discuss Text Evaluation 26 RELATIVE WEIGHT Project 40 % Homework30% Exams30 % Total100%

27 ~ 690 Cholla Power Plants How Much Energy Does the USA Use?

28 Water

29 Food

30 Environment

31 Communities

32 32

33 33 Recent Wind Speed Map

34 Wind Speed Data 34

35 Wind Anemometry Data Wind speed data taken by anemometers on tall towers (30 m to 60 m) 1-second data, averaged over 10-minutes with a standard deviation (i.e., turbulence) Wind direction vane Cup Anemometers at multiple heights Data loggers 35

36 Arizona Wind Data http://wind.nau.edu/anemometer/wind_data.shtml 36

37 37

38 Wind Development 38


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