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Wind Power Development: Economics and PoliciesG. Cornelis Van KootenUniversity of Victoria - Economics Govinda R. TimilsinaWorld Bank - Development Research Group March 1, 2009 World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4868 Abstract: This study reviews the prospects of wind power at the global level. Existing studies indicate that the earth's wind energy supply potential significantly exceeds global energy demand. Yet, only 1 percent of the global electricity demand is currently derived from wind power despite 40 percent annual growth in wind generating capacity over the past 25 years. More than 98 percent of total current wind power capacity is installed in the developed countries plus China and India. It has been estimated that wind power could supply 7 to 34 percent of global electricity needs by 2050. However, wind power faces a large number of technical, economic, financial, institutional, market, and other barriers. To overcome these barriers, many countries have employed various policy instruments, including capital subsidies, tax incentives, tradable energy certificates, feed-in tariffs, grid access guarantees and mandatory standards. Besides these policies, climate change mitigation initiatives resulting from the Kyoto Protocol (e.g., CO2-emission reduction targets in developed countries and the Clean Development Mechanism in developing countries) have played a significant role in promoting wind power.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 34 Keywords: Energy Production and Transportation, Carbon Policy and Trading, Windpower, Environment and Energy Efficiency, Energy and Environment working papers seriesDate posted: March 25, 2009Suggested Citation |
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