Long-Term Implications of Sustained Wind Power Growth in the United States: Potential Benefits and Secondary Impacts

Eric Lantz, Garvin Heath, David Keyser, Jordan Macknick, Trieu Mai, Ryan Wiser, Mark Bolinger, Dev Millstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Scopus Citations

Abstract

We model scenarios of the U.S. electric sector in which wind generation reaches 10% of end-use electricity demand in 2020, 20% in 2030, and 35% in 2050. As shown in a companion paper, achieving these penetration levels would have significant implications for the wind industry and the broader electric sector. Compared to a baseline that assumes no new wind deployment, under the primary scenario modeled, achieving these penetrations imposes an incremental cost to electricity consumers of less than 1% through 2030. These cost implications, however, should be balanced against the variety of environmental and social implications of such a scenario. Relative to a baseline that assumes no new wind deployment, our analysis shows that the high-penetration wind scenario yields potential greenhouse-gas benefits of $85–$1,230 billion in present-value terms, with a central estimate of $400 billion. Air-pollution-related health benefits are estimated at $52–$272 billion, while annual electric-sector water withdrawals and consumption are lower by 15% and 23% in 2050, respectively. We also find that a high-wind-energy future would have implications for the diversity and risk of energy supply, local economic development, and land use and related local impacts on communities and ecosystems; however, these additional impacts may not greatly affect aggregate social welfare owing to their nature, in part, as resource transfers.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)146-158
Number of pages13
JournalApplied Energy
Volume179
DOIs
StatePublished - 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-6A20-64321

Keywords

  • Air pollution
  • Co-benefits
  • Greenhouse gases
  • Water use
  • Wind energy

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