We've talked about why, long term, green energy faces tremendous obstacles in making a substantial market impact it's too expensive, and too far behind fossil fuels' existing infrastructure.
But the Federal
The U.S. installed a total of 10,700 megawatts of wind power capacity last year.
That was 23 percent more than natural gas (8,700 mw) and more than twice as much as coal (4,500 mw).
Solar came in fifth (behind nuclear) with 1,500 mw in new facilities.
Here's the chart (with wind and natgas highlighted).
American-based wind manufacturers remain undercapitalized — with the exception of towermaker Trinity Energy, which saw an explosive +60% 2H2012 — so it's a bit difficult to trade on the trend.
The big gust in new wind capacity was partially attributable accelerated installation ahead of the "wind cliff" manufacturers were facing — the government's tax credit was set to expire.
But it has been renewed for at least year, which could mean the trend will continue to sail along.
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