The hunt for clean renewable energy is on. Methods that have
been around for centuries are attracting new interest and old
technology has become new again. I doubt that there is any
technology older than the force of the wind. All of us have seen
paintings of windmills drawn in the Renaissance by the Great Artists of
that time. Wind power is a technology that has always been
available but never fully exploited, up until now.
With the rising cost of fossil fuel both in actual dollars and in the
damage done to the environment clean, renewable wind energy is
attracting attention all over the world. There have always been
technological problems with the durability and effectiveness of the
generators employed in this type of energy. This particular type
of energy may have needed to wait for today’s new miracle materials and
production methods to attain the durability and size required to be
productive and profitable. The following article in "The Week in
Germany" describes how Siemens AG is investing $17 Million to build a
plant in Iowa that manufactures wind turbines that produce
energy. With this type of investment, it is clear that this
segment of the energy market is growing and is a serious source of new
energy.
Siemens AG Announces Plans to Build Wind Turbines in Iowa
Siemens Power Generation, a subsidiary of the German firm Siemens AG,
announced plans to invest over $17 million in a new wind turbine
manufacturing facility in Fort Madison, Iowa. The plant will increase
Siemen’s production capacity to better serve the growing US wind energy
market.
The site, to be built in a shuttered truck trailer factory, will cast
massive rotor blades (about 45 m in length) in one piece from a
glass-fiber-reinforced epoxy resin using an environmentally friendly
process patented by Siemens.
State and local economic development officials hailed the project as a
victory for an area of southwestern Iowa that has been hit hard by cuts
in the manufacturing industry. The plant will create an estimated 250
jobs that pay an average of approximately $19 per hour.
Siemens Power Generation chief executive Randy Zwirn noted that the
decision to increase wind turbine production capacity in Iowa came in
response to forecasts that the US market for wind energy will triple by
2020. While wind only accounts for 1 percent of America’s total
electricity supply currently, the US Department of Energy has set a
target of obtaining six percent of the nation’s energy from wind by
2020. In Germany, where Siemens has provided the technology for
numerous wind farms, wind already accounts for 4.3 percent of the
energy supply (as of 2005), according to statistics from the Federal
Ministry for the Environment.
Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) praised the plan, noting the role of
tax subsidies: "With the recently adopted wind energy tax credits,
we're well positioned to increase the renewable power generation
sources in the U.S. in the future, and with this new Siemens facility,
Iowa will be at the epicenter of supplying clean, alternative energy
sources." The Des Moines Register reported that Siemens will receive
$1.6 million in forgivable loans, over $800,000 in tax refunds, and $2
million in tax increment finance funds to build the plant.
SOURCE: http://www.germany.info/relaunch/info/publications/week/2006/060825/economy1.html
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