
According to Jonathan Kendall, Founding partner of Rio Energy Consulting � TSS Brazil, everyone�s excited and there are hundreds of projects being planned.
Accroding to Ricardo Baitelo, Greenpeace�s renewable energy campaign coordinator in Sao Paulo, the future tenders will also be more profitable. This is because the government is poised to introduce equipment-import and other tax breaks, as well as cheaper financing rates through Brazil�s development bank BNDES, to make it all happen. Baitelo says a European-style feed-in tariff is not contemplated, however.
�The production price will go down to 200 reais (US$111) or even 100 reais (US$55) from around 300 reais (US$166) now,� once the government introduces the incentives, he adds.
According to Baitelo, the expansion is so aggressive that wind farms could very well overtake natural gas thermal plants as Brazil�s second-power generation source in five years, moving right behind the number one source � hydroelectric power.
�Right now the majority of the thermal power plants are running on natural gas, accounting for five percent of generation, though there is a small percentage of oil and diesel, accounting for four percent and coal for 1.8 percent,� Baitelo explains. �But the government doesn�t want to build more fuel-powered plants after 2015 as oil and biodiesel are more expensive to import and more polluting.�
That is why wind, as well as biomass, is expected to see huge development in coming years, observers say.
In the meantime, we�ll have a closer look at Brazil in the coming months. We at Tomorrow is Greener are really excited to see how things will progress in the South-American country.
Source : http://www.tomorrowisgreener.com/wind-power-could-become-huge-in-brazil/
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