Global wind industry grows 44% in 2014

CleanTechnica

New figures released by the Global Wind Energy Council show that the global wind industry grew by 44% in 2014, installing over 51 GW and, according to the Global Wind Energy Council, acting as a “solid sign of the recovery of the industry after a rough patch in the past few years.”

According to the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC), 51,4777 GW of new wind energy capacity was installed in 2014, pushing the cumulative total worldwide up to 369,553 GW by the end of the year.

GWEC-7-570x203

Unsurprisingly, therefore, those involved in the wind industry are excited about the possibility of renewed growth.

“Wind power is the most competitive way of adding new power generation capacity to the grid in a rapidly increasing number of markets around the world, even when competing against heavily subsidized incumbents,” said Steve Sawyer, GWEC Secretary General.

“Wind is a rapidly maturing technology, with proven reliability and competitiveness. Not only the low prices but also the cost-stability of wind power makes it a very attractive option for utilities, independent power producers and companies who are looking for a hedge against the wildly fluctuating prices of fossil fuels.”

GWEC-8-570x202

In a completely unsurprising turn of events, China continues to lead the way, setting a new record in 2014 of over 23 GW of new wind power capacity installed, which makes up for 45% of the global market. In fact, GWEC-10-183x300China makes up an incredible amount of the Asian market, which only sits at 26,161 MW, with India in second place, having installed a distant 2.3 GW.

As seen in the numbers put out by the European Wind Energy Agency, the European wind energy industry grew marginally with a 3.8% year on year growth over 2013, installing 12.8 GW of new capacity — bulked by Germany’s 5,279 MW and the UK’s 1,736 MW.

American installation additions amounted to a respectable 934 MW, while Brazil led the way in Latin America, installing 2,472 MW of the region’s total 3,749 MW.

Up north, America recovered somewhat, installing 4,854 MW, while Canada set a new record with 1,871 MW and Mexico a healthy 522 MW.

And, as the GWEC put it, “Australia’s 567 MW showed that the renewables industry in Australia is not dead, despite the best efforts of the government to kill it.”

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“The wind power industry is a key solution to climate change, air pollution, energy security, price stability and a driver of new industries and employment,” said Sawyer. “Let’s hope the climate negotiators get that message and come up with something useful in Paris in December.”

 

Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Comments

11 responses to “Global wind industry grows 44% in 2014”

  1. Tim Avatar
    Tim

    I think this article confuses MW with GW.

    1. Tim Avatar
      Tim

      (In para 2)

    2. Independent Avatar
      Independent

      Using European decimal system which uses “,”, not “.”. That said, Mr. Hill is arithmetically challenged. His growth numbers are way off. Unfortunately, many of the folks reporting on renewable energy confuse enthusiasm with accuracy. They do themselves and the cause they espouse a disservice.

  2. Independent Avatar
    Independent

    The headline says the industry grew by 44%. It also says capacity grew by 51GW to a cumulative 369 GW. That’s more like 15%. Joshua, you need to go back and work on some basic arithmetic skills.

    1. Rikaishi Rikashi Avatar
      Rikaishi Rikashi

      51 gw is 144% of the capacity installed in the previous year(~34.5 GW), not total capacity. That’s what “44% growth” means since the “industry” being referred to is the production and installation of wind generators.

      1. Independent Avatar
        Independent

        The lead sentence: “New figures released by the Global Wind Energy Council show that the global wind industry grew by 44% in 2014″….

      2. Independent Avatar
        Independent

        It’s very misleading and that’s generous. It leaves the impression that the author wants to hype the sector, which ultimately is counterproductive.

        1. Giles Avatar

          So, to take your argument, when the coal industry says it’s production has grown 10 per cent, say from 4 bin tonnes to 4.4 bin tonnes, you would argue that that was misleading. Because, the world has probably mined about 400 bin tonnes, so the industry only grew 1 pct. I think you are being ridiculous.

          1. Independent Avatar
            Independent

            All I’m saying is that when the headline says the industry grew by 44%, that implies an expansion of capacity of 44%. What the headline should have said was net additions to capacity grew by 44% vs. the previous year. When I saw that headline, I immediately dug deeper because it was such an impressive statistic. Having dug deeper, I’m left with the impression that the reporting is at best sloppy and the byproduct of journalistic mediocrity and/or ideological hype. In either scenario, the end impression is not a positive one.

        2. Rikaishi Rikashi Avatar
          Rikaishi Rikashi

          “the global wind installation industry grew by 44% in 2014, installing over 51 GW” would have been less ambiguous, but also less elegant.

          It’s just a sad fact of the English language that precision usually comes at the cost of readability.

          1. Independent Avatar
            Independent

            That reads awkward. Try: “Net additions to Wind capacity grew by 44% vs. the previous year.”

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