Wind Energy Offers Clean Path to Economic Growth
Gov. Sam Brownback - Thu 12:58 PM 09/08/2011
The moment is approaching when our nation must decide how it’s going to power the future. The importance of renewable energy to the nation becomes clear as Congress turns its attention to energy policy this fall, as we examine the importance of true energy independence and security more closely, and as we continue our work on rebuilding the economy and job creation.
Experience has taught us that investments in the renewable energy economy is creating jobs across all employment sectors, including construction, engineering, operations, technology and professional services, in both rural and urban communities.
Greater use of renewable energy also will allow the country to prolong its current power generation resources while developing new generation technologies to ensure a secure and homegrown supply of energy.
I’ve stated that our citizens won’t fully embrace emerging energy technologies until it’s in their best economic interest to do so. As I meet with business leaders from around the world, they’re increasingly drawn to powering their facilities with wind in an effort to align their business practices with company philosophy.
Others have been hesitant to embrace renewable energy sources such as wind power, citing a potential increase in cost compared to traditional sources. Many have forged ahead, confident the long-term benefits of renewable energy will outweigh the short-term costs.
Re-Evaluating the Economics
Now, as power prices for new wind generation continue to deflate, many businesses are re-evaluating the economics. We, as a nation, have been waiting for the moment when a true balance between environmental concerns, economic benefits and energy needs is in view. I believe that moment has arrived.
At the national level, we’ve moved towards this balance by deploying powerful tools, such as tax incentives to support investment in renewable energy projects and grants to encourage innovation in clean-coal technologies. The wind industry has utilized a production tax credit, which has helped the industry see steady growth this decade. I support the continued use of those tools as a way to spur investment in our communities and create sorely needed jobs.
In Kansas and the lower Midwest, our local utilities have designed and are constructing an electric transmission system that ensures greater reliability for our residents, offers access to competitively priced power, and dramatically increases our ability to move renewable energy across the country.
Energy Highways
Other private companies are working to develop renewable energy highways -- dedicated transmission lines -- that can transport thousands of megawatts of renewable energy from the Midwest to population centers in the East, thereby providing access to clean, reliable and affordable energy for millions of customers.
The Grain Belt Express Clean Line, which will deliver 3,500 megawatts of low cost, renewable energy from western Kansas to southeastern Missouri and points farther east, is a great example of such a project.
A combination of events has occurred in Kansas that has driven the cost of wind energy to historic lows. We have 1,100 megawatts of operational wind and are on track to more than double that number by the end of 2012.
Wind energy makes a compelling economic case with new installed wind prices dropping from around $0.06 per kilowatt hour to $0.03 per kW or lower, while turbine technology increases capacity factors to around 50 percent or more. We’ve increased transmission capacity, constructing more than 1,000 new miles of high-voltage electric transmission. And the wind developers are motivated to sell because of the possible expiration of the tax credits at the end of 2012.
Pricing Kansas Wind
The price of Kansas wind is now competitive with the traditional sources of energy and you can get guaranteed rates for the next 20 years.
Kansans have a proud history of meeting the needs of the world. We export wheat to feed the hungry and machines that can fly to make the world a smaller place. The time has come for us to export clean, reliable, and affordable wind energy to the nation.
For states, utility companies, businesses and citizens, there will be no better time in the foreseeable future than the next few months to purchase wind power.
Many business and political leaders have set renewable energy goals for their organizations. The time has arrived to take action to meet those goals. If you choose to do so, you can be confident you’re also serving the best economic interests of your shareholders, customers and citizens. You can know you’re doing your part to protect the environment. You will be able to meet your future energy needs.
And we, as a nation, can seize this moment and take a significant step into the future of power.

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ShadowCipher
Thursday 8 September 2011 13:49 Report this comment
Wind energy is a wise investment that will improve Kansas in many ways. I do, however, feel we should not be supplying other states with power generated from Kansas. Every state should be responsible for it's own power needs. Creating a dependency on another state creates a fragile infrastructure. Each state must create a self-sustaining infrastructure. If each state becomes self-sustaining, and not relying on other state's resources, the quality of life for Americans will be greater than anybody can imagine.
gettumgramps
Thursday 8 September 2011 15:14 Report this comment
genius, sheer genius, shadowcipher. Does that mean Kansans should build their houses of mud, as we have no trees and rely on the resources of other states? no steel either, we have no iron mines. Also know that people make money by SELLING the power out of state.
gettumgramps
Thursday 8 September 2011 15:16 Report this comment
i shouldn't stop there. kansans are idiots. this guy just put a moratorium via executive order on wind turbines in the central and eastern part of the state, but now he is for wind energy? what does brownback know that you don't? that you are stupid and will vote him in next time around.
ShadowCipher
Thursday 8 September 2011 17:35 Report this comment
gettumgramps, at no point did I state that Kansans should not use resources from other locations. I said that that every state should create a self-sustaining infrastructure. To put it in simple words for you, gettungramps, Kansas should be completely self-sufficient in matters of our electrical grid (power), roadways, sewer control, & water supplies. There will always be a demand for exchanging resources to create systems in various locations, but as long as those systems enable states (or people for that matter) to be self-sufficient, and self-sustaining, that is the greater goal.
ShadowCipher
Thursday 8 September 2011 17:35 Report this comment
To rely on another because of a failed system is daft. I understand there is money to be made by selling power out of state, but that doesn't mean it is the best option. As far as Sam Brownback's moratorium, it did not stop from turbines being put up in the majority of Kansas, but rather areas he felt had some "tourism" value. There are plenty of other parts of Kansas that produce more wind than these areas the moratorium prevents from development. I think if you listen more, and talk less you may learn Kansans aren't as ignorant as you think.
Conservative
Sunday 11 September 2011 12:16 Report this comment
Anyone wonder, “Why did T. Boone Pickens drop his campaign for wind energy?” Can it be because the technology is not developed enough to deliver on its promises? Truth be told, excessive maintenance costs are being camouflaged from the public eye so that we don’t hear that these machines’ lifespans are almost half what has been predicted increasing the actual cost per kilowatt of production to a figure way above that of conventional coal-fired powerplants? Drive out west of Glendale on I-70 and see how many of them are not running at any given time before you invest. I’d check this out before agreeing that Kansas’ wind is such a valuable asset… maybe in the future it will be.
marme57
Sunday 18 September 2011 19:29 Report this comment
Several years ago when a proposed wind farm was headed our way I did some research and found that then and even now, wind is not a viable alternative to fossil fuels. Without the government subsidies wind does not and will not work. We can not afford it. Other countries have tried it and abandoned facilities. It along with solar is as of right now a tree hugger pipe dream. It won't work. Our Governor has had smoke blown you know where, or is one of those good ole boy Republicans playin the game. This country was built on fossil fuels and that will be what brings us out of the jam this administration has gotten us into. Its time to cut the BS and get real! Has anyone heard of natural gas or nuclear energy. We've got what it takes, lets invest in something that we know works.