Renewable Energy
Benefits of Renewable Energy
The
western United States has the best mix of renewable
energy resources in the entire country, with abundant
wind, solar, geothermal, biomass and small hydropower
resources throughout the region. Renewable energy
projects throughout Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New
Mexico, Utah and Wyoming already have a nameplate
capacity of over 1,330 megawatts (MW), and 2007 is
expected to be a record-setting year, with nearly 1,000
MW of new capacity planned in wind, solar and biomass
projects around the region. Renewable energy projects
offer:
- New economic development opportunities
- New job-creation opportunities
- Consumer benefits with greater cost stability
- Environmentally friendly power generation
- A beneficial response to the threat of global
warming
Renewable Energy Saves Water
Consumption of Three Electricity Generation
Technologies:
- Coal: 490 gallons per megawatt-hour
- Natural Gas Combined Cycle: 250 gallons per
megawatt-hour
- Wind: no water required for power generation
Renewable Energy Provides Economic and Environmental
Benefits
Renewable energy generation projects create vibrant
new industries in local communities, frequently in rural
areas where the economy has not been thriving.
Renewable energy provides a new avenue for rural
economic development, increases local and state tax
bases, insures against rising or variable fuel costs,
decreases dependence on foreign energy sources, and
offers numerous environmental benefits.
Where are the Renewable Energy Projects in the West?
- View
Interwest’s project locator to see where renewable
energy projects are located in Arizona, Colorado,
Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming!
- Visit the website of the
Renewable Energy
Atlas of the West, which allows you to view, zoom
into and print interactive maps of solar, wind,
geothermal and biomass resources in the Western United
States using an interactive map tool.
Representative Economic Benefits of a 100-Megawatt
Wind Power Project
- 200 construction jobs and 6-8 permanent
professional jobs ($40-50k annual salary)
- $200,000 - $400,000 annual royalties paid to
landowners (Approx. 10-30 owners)
- Approximately $10 million in potential tax
revenues (property and sales tax)
- $10 million in local purchases (electrical, roads,
engineering, legal, etc.)
- Limits the adverse effect of high and fluctuating
natural gas prices
Additional Benefits
- Little to no water is required to produce wind
energy
- Reduces dependence on foreign oil sources and
nuclear energy
- No harmful nitrogen, carbon, or sulphur emissions
are produced by wind farms
- Improves air quality and visibility due to
decreased burning of fossil fuels
The Colorado Green Success Story
See a
slideshow (PDF format) on the huge benefits that the
162-megawatt Colorado Green windfarm near Lamar,
Colorado has brought to that rural part of the state. |