In stark contrast, Wind Power is a friggin battleground it is so lucrative. Do you know how much money each turbine makes in a year?
Have you seen what a battle ground the double-A battery market is? Damn those things kill wind power for profit. I mean look at the ads where they're battling it out. You've got Rayovac, Duarcell, Energizer all running big add campaigns...
Obviously AA batteries are therefore the thing which will lead to energy independence for baseload use!
Do you know how much money each turbine makes in a year?
Depends. That's a highly loaded question. Different locations will have VASTLY different potential. Hows about we use "Cape Wind" as an example?
Big proposed project off of Cape Cod Ma. That's considered the "Best" offshore wind location for the Northeastern US. In other words: ANY other location would do WORSE than this.
Project cost: about 900 million dollars to build. With commitment to take down the windmills eventually. They have about a 20 year lifespan, and they're going to require maintience. These are out at sea, so you have to bare in mind that they will require relatively frequent repainting and such to keep corrosion in check. Any metal offshore structure needs that.
The cost over the lifespan of the project are estimated about 1.2 billion dollars, including the final cost of either removing or refurbing and overhauling them at the time of planned life span.
They optimistically hope for about 1.5 billion kilowatt hours per year in electrical output. Reasonable, but on the high-side of estimates...
But we'll use their optimistic estimate...
The wholesale price that an electrical company will pay for that is actually just about one cent per kilowatt hour. It varies from .9 cents to about 1.2 cents. This is not only because "non stable" sources like this are hated by power utilities (who often would not buy the damn electricity if they weren't required to). But the amount you pay for electricity has a lot to do with distribution, line losses, maintenance, taxes and so on than generating cost.
The capacity factor issue of wind power makes every kilowatt hour worth the equivalent of about half of standard generation, because the variance factor means you twice as much to reliably reduce output elsewhere.
So they'd get 15 million dollars per year. Oh good. They can get their investment back in just 60 years. Oh wait... I thought the turbines were rated for an offshore lifespan of about 20 years? Well, maybe if they take good care of them they could double that.... oh wait... still not enough... damn
But I thought they wanted to make a profit?
Oh wait... EXTREMELY generous public funds:
http://www.prnewsnow.com/Public_Release/State/98931.html
Ah, so basically they're doing this at a loss to sap up the funds of Massachussettes and the US.
Oh wait... but aren't their subsides for nuclear plants too?
Hmmm... well based on what the DOE has been paying...
The 2006 Department of Energy research and development budget provides $1.2 billion for renewables and conservation, $800 million for clean coal, and $510 million for nuclear. These levels reflect the growing awareness that the United States will need a diverse generation portfolio to meet increasing demand, to reduce emissions, and to move closer to energy independence.
Okay...
Hmm... according to this page the subsidies for wind power per kilowatt are $1200... JESUS H CHRIST THATS HIGH
http://www.ncpa.org/studies/renew/renew2c.html
Christ... based on all the articles i've read, wind power subsidies seem to be in the multiple billions if you include all the tax writeoffs...
http://scienceline.org/2007/08/17/env-romero-green-energy-markets/
Hmmm... Jeez... Well at least with subsidies it won't be the consumer who gets hit in the pocket... at least not directly...
Oh wait just look at this page:
http://www.awea.org/faq/wwt_costs.html
If my utility uses more wind energy, will that make my electric rates go up my electric rates go up?
Yes, probably, but not much. Let's say that wind energy costs 2 cents more per kilowatt-hour (2 cents/kWh) than the rest of the electricity your utility is generating or buying—a conservative estimate.
And that's from a pro-wind page. So even with all that funding it still costs a bit more? Wow.
Well at least the billions of dollars have resulted in making wind power a real source of energy in the US...
Wait what's that? It's only less than 1%? But haven't these been around since at leas the early 1990's?
So if we shell out billions per year like we do not, how long till we get to a 20% wind power use? That would be as high as nuclear?
Oh wait... that would be 100 years. Assuming demand does NOT INCREASE
So if something is going to be subsidized... um... shouldn't we get something semi-decent in return, at least?