global wind updates - renewable-ei.org · 3/9/2016 · 606 927 1431 2508 3461 total installed...
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Beijing | Brussels | Washington
Klaus Rave, Chairman GWECREvision2016
9 March 2016
Global Wind Updates
About GWEC
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The Global Wind Energy Council is the international trade association for the wind power industry
Our mission is to ensure that wind power establishes itself as the answer to today's energy challenges, providing substantial environmental and economic
benefits.
Our members are also all of the national wind industry trade associations, from both established and emerging markets, including the world largest markets of the United States, all the European markets, India and China.
GWEC represents the wind industry at the following international organisations:
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GWEC – Uniting the global wind industry and its representative associations
C0 Members
Associations
C1, C2 and C3 Members
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2015 growth: 17%
16 yr avg. growth: 24.2%
Beijing | Brussels | Washington
Beijing | Brussels | Washington
16 yr avg. growth: 24.9%
2015 growth: 21.8%
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A short comparison
France & Germany
Argentina
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
25673 27097 29071 31270 34250
TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW)
Germany
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
4713 5977 6809 7623 8254
TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW)
France
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 44,947 MW
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 10,358 MW
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A short comparison
China & India
China
India
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 145,104MW
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 25,008 MW
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A short comparison
Argentina & Brazil
0
50
100
150
200
250
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
34 50 113 142 218
TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW)TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW)
Argentina
0500
1000150020002500300035004000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
606 927 1431 2508 3461
TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW)
Brazil
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 279 MW
Cumulative wind power capacity in
2015: 8,715 MW
The wind world in 2015
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activities in more than 90 countries
432.419 MW installed capacity
in 24 countries there are more than 1000 MW installed
in 11 countries more than 5 GW
4 global trends
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globalisation
decentralisation
decarbonisation
electrification
and a dual challenge
fighting climate change
fighting energy poverty
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The increase of renewables makes new markets and new players in these markets
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grid operators (a new business case needs to be established plus an internationalisation like the running of oil and gas pipelines)
power producers (stimulate diversity, reliability and competition)traders and brokers (as new agents to be well regulated)
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stimulating change via R&D and guaranteed prices/feed-in-tariffs
stabilizing and refining via unbundling and long-term PPAs
entering the state of maturity via competitive bidding
Different stages of development demand different answers and solutions for the opening of markets
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unbundling and guaranteed access to the grid
a supervisory authority for the operation of the grid
in order to make it work the rules have to be redesigned
“The Market is not a good master but a good servant”
transparent technical standards for electricity generation and distribution
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Energy markets always were and will be political as their strategic importance is overwhelmingly important:
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electricity is the key energy of the 21st century - no communication without electrification
modern grids will take electricity markets into new dimension - a truly international business emerges as the barriers of the old monopolies are
overcome
as renewables take over the world see a second phase of decolonization – no longer are we suffering from dependence on oil and gas and coal and uranium
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There are no barriers of technology or natural resources
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o politics and policies
o regulation and regulatory frameworks
o good governance and planning and procedure
the only remaining barriers are man-made
There are enough best practice examples around to learn from or copy:but we definitely need to accelerate the learning- curve.