in News Departments > FYI
print the content item

GE has announced that in the 10 years since it entered the wind energy business, it has installed 18,000 wind turbines worldwide, representing 28 GW in wind power capacity.

The company expects that its installed wind turbine base will exceed 20,000 units by the end of the year. Over the last decade, nearly one in every two wind turbines installed in the U.S. has been a GE wind turbine, and the company has introduced its wind technology into new markets, such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Poland and Turkey.

"The cost of wind power has gone from mid-double digits to mid-single digits, largely due to wind turbine efficiency, manufacturing productivity and availability improvements," says Vic Abate, vice president of renewable energy at GE. “Within the next two years, wind will generate five percent of the planet’s electricity and continue to be one of the top three new power generation sources in the next decade.”

The company also notes that its 2.5-series of wind turbines have surpassed 2 GW of installed capacity worldwide.

Abate says Europe, Canada, Brazil, China and India will be the top growth markets for GE’s wind business in the immediate future.

“We are rapidly growing in Europe, and both Canada and Brazil are very active,” he notes.



Hse SandyHook
Latest Top Stories

Post-FIT Decision, Turbine OEMs Mull Over Options For Ontario Wind Energy Market

Under political pressure, the Ontario government recently pulled the plug on its landmark feed-in tariff (FIT) program for large-scale renewable energy projects, leaving provincial suppliers and manufacturers with an uncertain future.


Continent's First Grid-Connected Offshore Wind Turbine Floats In Maine Waters

Billed as a historic day for offshore wind in North America, researchers flipped the switch on a floating prototype. This marks the first electrons from an offshore wind turbine to flow into the region's grid.


Raising The Discourse: How Wind Industry Can Help Avoid 'Climate Emergency'

Larry Schweiger, the president/CEO at the National Wildlife Federation, says the wind industry is an important ally to combat global warming, which is triggering dangerous and unprecedented weather events around the world.


The Numbers Don't Lie: U.S. Utilities Continue To Embrace Wind Energy

Last year, more than 40% of U.S. utilities reported having wind energy on their systems, proving the fact that utilities continue to integrate wind in growing numbers – and, in some cases, at unprecedented levels.


BOEM To Award Mass., R.I. Offshore Wind Leases; Pre-Qualifies Nine Developers

In July, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management will auction nearly 165,000 acres off the coasts of Rhode Island and Massachusetts to facilitate offshore wind development.

Power Climber_id1660
NRG Systems JWT_id1677
SandC Electric_id1674
Upwind Solutions_id1629
Trachte Inc._id484
AWEA_id
JEC Americas_id1707