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Journal article

Wind power costs driven by innovation and experience with further reductions on the horizon

From

National Renewable Energy Laboratory1

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2

European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute3

Department of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark4

Society, Market and Policy, Wind Energy Systems Division, Department of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark5

Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft6

The University of Tokyo7

The costs of wind power have declined to levels on par with or below those of conventional sources in many parts of the world. Wind power has become one of the fastest‐growing sources of new electricity generation. We take stock of wind power cost evolution over the past 20 years, review methodologies commonly used for cost assessment, discuss the potential for continued cost reduction, and identify anticipated cost and value drivers.

Our scope includes both onshore and offshore wind technologies. We draw from a vast body of literature on these topics to highlight key trends, approaches, and limitations. Furthermore, we discuss strategies for wind power assets to enhance their marginal economic value to the broader power system and consumers.

We identify a myriad of factors that are expected to influence the future cost and value of wind power, including siting, project scale, turbine size, operational synergies, commodity prices, advancements in turbine technologies, enhanced management of the wind resource, and novel control technologies that provide value for the electricity grid.

Because the common methods for forecasting future costs each have their own strengths and weaknesses, we find the best insights are elicited from a combination of methods. Overall, researchers and analysts anticipate further sizable cost reductions for onshore and offshore wind. Midrange forecasts for levelized cost of energy in 2050 are generally between $20 and $30/MWh for onshore wind and $40 and $60/MWh for offshore wind, a reduction to approximately half of today's levels.

Optimistic forecasts anticipate these levels as early as 2030.

Language: English
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Year: 2021
ISSN: 2041840x and 20418396
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1002/wene.398
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-9339-7398 , 0000-0002-2225-957X , 0000-0001-8901-6620 , 0000-0001-6352-6657 , 0000-0002-0698-3816 , 0000-0002-2540-1092 , Kitzing, Lena , 0000-0002-9975-9708 and 0000-0003-3382-6557

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