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[Report]
The Renewables Landscape: Wind at the Threshold
Published: 2008/04
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Table of Contents
- DATAMONITOR VIEW
- ANALYSIS
- Historically, large hydro has been the only commercially mature
renewable technology; however, today, wind is at the threshold
- The renewable energy industry is growing rapidly on the back of
technological advancements, political will and subsidies
- Wind power has become one of the broadest-based renewables
technologies, with installations in more than 70 countries
- Global installed wind capacity is experiencing significant growth,
with the majority of new capacity now outside Europe
- The growth of global wind energy generation has outpaced that of total
global energy generation 10-fold
- Wind is often considered an unreliable generation technology, yet wind
turbine load factors have been very consistent, albeit low
- While wind energy may be variable, it need not be unpredictable
- In a market that is increasingly characterized by the rise of the
portfolio investor, utilities with renewable energy targets are building
wind portfolios through acquisitions
- Among the major European utilities, the top 25 wind asset owners
account for 20% of the total global installed wind capacity
- The rise of the portfolio investor: institutional investors and IPPs
own a significant percentage of the total installed wind capacity
- Booming demand means that the global wind energy industry must now
overcome significant challenges
- Supply chain shortages have sparked industry restructuring
- Policies have had a major impact upon the speed and extent of renewable
energy development, despite many design and implementation problems
- At present, at least 64 countries have a national target for renewable
energy supply, including all 27 EU countries
- The RES-E directive sparked the adaptation of legal frameworks in all
EU countries, and several countries outside Europe
- The EC intends to support the 2020 targets via a harmonized
' target-and-trade' system
- Countries with an existing share of final energy supply that meets or
exceeds the draft directive' s ' interim trajectory' will benefit most
- The directive is designed to support renewable power in the EU, but
could, instead, undermine existing local support schemes
- Utilities have fallen behind the curve on renewable generation and are
now tasked with applying successful strategies to tap major global growth
opportunities
- Utilities have fallen behind the curve on renewable generation and are
only now beginning to catch up
- Strong global growth will continue on the back of technology maturity,
policy incentives and heightened investor appetite
- Utilities have rapidly introduced global wind generation strategies by
growing wind portfolios, mostly through acquisition
- APPENDIX
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor consulting
- Disclaimer
- List of Figures
- Figure 1: Global renewable electricity capacity reached 207GW in 2006
- Figure 2: in 2006, the world' s total renewable installed capacity
accounted for less than one third of the total large hydro capacity and
less than 5% of the world' s total power generation capacity
- Figure 3: Global installed wind power capacity increased by an
estimated 21GW in 2007
- Figure 4: Germany led the way in total installed wind energy capacity
in 2007
- Figure 5: The US led the way in new installed wind energy capacity in
2007
- Figure 6: European wind generation accounted for just 3% (98TWh) of
the total energy generated in 2007 (3,444TWh)
- Figure 7: EU wind energy generation has grown inline with capacity,
suggesting consistent wind patterns throughout the EU wind fleet
- Figure 8: From 2003 to 2005, load factors across the world' s wind
fleets remained largely in the 18%−25% range, and never exceeded a
4.5 standard deviation
- Figure 9: Despite heightened green credentials, utilities' installed
wind capacity remains a modest part of their overall generation mix
- Figure 10: A combination of heightened M&A activity and organic
new build is keeping European wind energy ownership in a state of flux
- Figure 11: The challenges facing the industry are borne from five main
causes
- Figure 12: EU targets for renewables' share of electricity production
typically range from 5%-30%, but reach 3.6% in Hungary and 78% in Austria
- Figure 13: No less than 60 countries (37 developed and transition
countries and 23 developing countries) have some form of policy to promote
renewable power generation
- Figure 14: No less than 60 countries (37 developed and transition
countries and 23 developing countries) have some form of policy to promote
renewable power generation
- Figure 15: Using 2005 as a baseline, each Member State will be
required to increase their share of final energy supply.
- Figure 16: Onshore and offshore wind will experience varying degrees
of growth over different time frames
- Figure 17: Utilities can access three main types of entry strategies
to scale their wind portfolios globally
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[Report]
The Renewables Landscape: Wind at the Threshold
Published: 2008/04
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Published by : Datamonitor  |
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Price:
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Product Code : DC65960 |
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