By 2050, the European Commission envisages half the bloc鈥檚 electricity will be sourced from wind power.
According to the Commission鈥檚 scenarios, getting there means increasing onshore wind from 180GW to 750GW, and offshore wind from 22GW to 450GW, an overall eight-fold increase in capacity.
For WindEurope, the wind industry association, the figures represent a 30-year marathon.聽
To make it manageable, CEO Giles Dickson says, the industry needs to add capacity every year in 30GW legs.
So far, however, European countries are only installing half of that, and that was before the disruptions of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Will it be enough?
鈥淭he simple answer is no,鈥 said Dickson. 鈥淭he current rates of deployment will not deliver the green deal.鈥
According to Dickson, success relies on simpler permit processes for new offshore projects and souping up old onshore wind farms that are nearing the end of their lives.聽
Onshore
As onshore wind farms have an expected life of 25 years, many existing turbines will need to be replaced before mid-century.
鈥淪o hardly any of the 180GW standing today will still be standing in 2050鈥, said Dickson. But WindEurope wants to go beyond replacing old capacity.
As Dickson sees it, there are significant gains to be made by increasing capacity and efficiency. For him, 鈥渢he transition can鈥檛 be linear 鈥 we don鈥檛 want an eight-fold increase in the number of wind turbines 鈥聽there are more efficient ways to work鈥.
What results is WindEurope鈥檚 argument for 鈥榬epowering鈥. In general, this will mean larger turbines in smaller numbers, says WindEurope.
鈥淏ecause the technology has advanced in the last 30 years, you can do so much more with the same amount of space,鈥 said Dickson.
At the El Cabrito wind farm in Spain, 15 new wind turbines generate the same power as 90 small turbines made in 1993. Dickson says this is an extreme case 鈥 鈥渁s a general rule, repowering means you can reduce the number of turbines by just over a quarter, but the electricity output is three times greater鈥.聽聽
However, Dickson predicts hurdles ahead for the repowering effort. The growth of houses close to existing wind farms and an increase in protected natural areas reduces the possibility of repowering some farms.聽
Some governments, such as Italy, have banned repowering wind farms until ten years after they have finished receiving feed-in tariffs.
鈥淵ou can understand why they might want to do that,鈥 Dickson said, it is a method to eke the most from a public funding investment before upgrading it.
The irony, as Dickson sees it, is the first wind farms were built on some of Europe鈥檚 blowiest real estate. 鈥淚t means we are persisting with some of worst turbines on some of the best wind sites,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd that comes at a cost to society in the long-run鈥.聽
Offshore
鈥楾hink long-term鈥 is Dickson鈥檚 plea when it comes to offshore projects and their permits. Returning to the 鈥榗lean energy for all鈥 figures, offshore wind sites need to increase from a current 22GW to 450GW by mid-century to meet demand.
Meanwhile, under the new Maritime Spatial Planning directive, member states are now setting out plans for the next six years.
For Dickson, six years is too short. 鈥淗ow do you factor in those goals in the next 30 years when you only have to think about the next six?鈥澛
His second criticism of maritime spatial planning is the 鈥榮ilo鈥 approach of many member states, where areas of the sea are preserved for exclusive use by fishing, military, nature reserve, or wind power.
According to WindEurope, the silo approach means that 60% of the North, Irish and Baltic seas and northern Atlantic is out of bounds to wind projects.聽聽
According to Dickson, for wind power to reach its potential, there needs to be a move towards multiple uses of sea areas.
"We are happy for fishermen to... use the same area,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd there is also scope for sharing space with military activity."
"Plus, it鈥檚 worth bearing in mind that the larger the turbines become, the more spaced apart they are." Some now have a space of one kilometre between them.聽
Investment
Dickson hopes easing permit regulations in member states will increase investment.聽Last year saw the in wind power since 2014.
Though Dickson noted investments have maintained a steady and healthy increase, it needs to be steeper.
On top of that, WindEurope predicts Covid-19 will knock back this year鈥檚 installations by 30%. A loss, Dickson warned, that will be difficult to recuperate immediately in 2021.聽
For Dickson, the recent setbacks mean it鈥檚 all the more crucial to continue investing and that the commission encourages member states to keep the industry competitive.
He wants to see governments 鈥減ut auction schemes in place鈥 to ease financing.
鈥淪ome member states might look at the cost and think, 'it doesn鈥檛 need public financial support anymore', but if everyone does that, the costs of installation begins to rise.鈥