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Study: 100-MW wind farm supports nearly 1,100 Jobs

By Paul Dvorak | September 17, 2012

Hub assy

Hub assembly is one of nearly 1,100 jobs generated by a 100 MW wind farm.

Each major wind farm in America creates nearly 1,100 jobs and can add tens of millions of dollars in new taxes and other benefits to the communities where they’re located, according to two new reports from the Natural Resources Defense Council.

A new 250-MW wind farm will create 1,079 jobs throughout the many steps of building that wind farm, according to the NRDC report “American Wind Farms: Breaking Down the Benefits from Planning to Production.”  The positions are in manufacturing, construction, engineering, and management, among others. And benefits don’t end there. A separate NRDC study on the secondary impacts of the wind energy industry shows more.

Wind farms also are helping revitalize communities across the country by generating new taxes, lease payments to landowners, and economic development revenues in addition to creating new job opportunities. The NRDC report “At Wind Speed: How the U.S. Wind Industry is Rapidly Growing Our Local Economies,” backs up the claims.  The report profiles four communities from Ohio to Oregon that have benefitted from the wind industry.

Today, wind farms generate about 50,000 MW of clean, renewable energy and the wind industry employs about 75,000 Americans. Wind energy production has increased more than 170% in the past four years alone.

Yet the industry’s growth and promise is now facing potential disaster because Congress has not renewed the 2.2 ¢/kWh Production Tax Credit (PTC) that’s set to expire at the end of the year.

NRDC policy advocate Cai Steger, co-author of the report, said: “Every time a wind farm gets built, American jobs are created. These reports show what the PTC has done for the wind industry – and why it’s essential that it is extended.”

Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, who is leading efforts in the Senate to extend the PTC, said: “The case is clear. The wind energy industry supports jobs and drives economic development. It’s time for Congress to make extending the bi-partisan wind PTC a top priority. “In Colorado and across the country, workers are already paying the price for Congressional inaction on the PTC,” Sen. Bennet said. “Those jobs losses are only a glimpse of what could happen if we let the tax credit expire.” According to the NRDC supply chain report, the 1,079 jobs created by a typical 250 MW wind farm are created at 14 different steps along the way of building the wind farm.

Non-construction businesses account for an estimated 557 jobs. They include 432 workers in manufacturing, 80 in planning and development, 18 in sales and distribution and 27 in operations and maintenance.

Construction jobs add another 522 jobs to a typical wind farm. These workers are spread between three categories, with 273 working on on-site civil works, such as roads, and foundations; 202 working on the installation of the wind turbines and 47 working on on-site electrical work, such as grid connection. The report also profiles American companies that could participate at every one of the 14 steps of the wind farm. The reports are here: http://www.nrdc.org/energy/american-wind-farms.asp and  http://www.nrdc.org/energy/wind-powered-communities/

Natinal Resource Defense Council
nrdc.org

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