Rising energy bills or putting increasing pressure on operators and government s to cut power prices. there is increasing talk that socalled eco friendly offshore power is too expensive for both both customers and taxpayers. Could we see many planned offshore wind projects never built as european governmenst switch to gas and more coal power stations as the politically and economically expediant thing to do.
Offshore wind is one
of the most talked-about forms of renewable energy. No doubt when the European
Commission will publish its Energy Roadmap 2050 in December, it will be crucial
in reaching the EU's renewable energy and climate targets. Yet in practice not
too many offshore wind parks have been built as yet. At the end of 2010, barely
3,000 MW of offshore wind capacity had been installed in Europe, mostly in the
UK and Denmark, according to figures from the European Wind Energy Association
(EWEA).
Countries like Spain (number two in onshore wind
power), Portugal, France, Greece and Italy have not built a single offshore wind
turbine yet. Germany (number one in onshore wind) has built just 92 MW. This
picture, however, is set to change drastically. Many European countries have
highly ambitious expansion plans in offshore wind. Germany wants to scale up its
capacity to 8,000 MW, France to 4,000 MW, the UK to 13,000 or maybe even 20,000
or 25,000 MW. Countries like Denmark, Ireland, Sweden and Belgium also have
ambitious plans.
In all, according to EWEA, by 2020 some 40,000 MW of
offshore wind power capacity will have been built in Europe. That's the
equivalent in capacity of some 40 coal-fired power stations.
That is, of course, if all plans go through, which is
still an "if". The first country to have scrapped its offshore wind power plans
is, a bit ironically, Holland, the country of windmills. The reason: the high
costs. So far the Dutch are the exception, but in the UK too a political
discussion has started. The UK government has now set up a panel that will
investigate how the costs of offshore wind farms can be brought down. To read more http://www.europeanenergyreview.eu/site/pagina.php?id=3299
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comments!