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english.com 2003 |
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Offshore wind farms in Britain
Level 1 |
Elementary
2
T
his week there was some very good news for
members of ecology groups, the so-called
" g r e e n s " . The British government said that it is
going to spend £6 billion to develop wind power. Th i s
could create 20,000 new jobs and it could provide
electricity for 15% of the population by 2010. Th e
government announced that it
would give licences to
companies which wanted to develop offshore wind
p o w e r. They said that they planned to generate 10% of
the country’s electricity from wind power and other
"green" sources of energy such as solar power and tidal
power by the end of the decade.
The wind power projects will produce about 6,000
m e g a watts of electricity. The cost of developing 6,000
MW will be about £6 billion and will create 20,000
engineering and construction jobs.
The British Wind Energy Association (BWEA) welcomed
the news. " The UK is sixth in the world in the use of
wind power behind countries
such as Germany, S p a i n
and Denmark, but at the same time the UK is the
windiest country in Europe. We have the best offshore
experts and worke r s, and all of this
means that Britain
could be the world leader in this new industry," said a
BWEA spoke s w o m a n .
But BWEA also said that there could be problems
connecting some wind power
projects to the national
electricity network. There could also be political
problems and the Ministry of Defence might be against
plans to build wind power turbines. The BWEA wa n t s
the government to confirm plans that the
UK will obtain
20% of its electricity from wind power and other
"green" methods by 2020.