Investments in and development of wind power in the US are very unevenly distributed. That is shown in four animated maps at Vox in their article, the stunningly lopsided growth of wind power in the US, in 4 maps. They explore why a huge swath of the country has almost no wind turbines at all.
[...] The major driver to invest in wind in many states is renewable portfolio standards, which mandate a minimum amount of electricity to come from renewable sources, like hydroelectric, wind, solar, and geothermal power plants. While federal incentives like the production tax credit, which benefits wind energy installations, apply across the country, state-level programs make a major difference on the ground.
“The states that have stronger RPSs are the places where you see renewables being deployed more actively,” said Ian Baring-Gould, a technology deployment manager at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. “In places that don’t have RPSs, the utilities don’t have as much motivation to develop renewables.”
Take a wild guess which states don’t have RPSs
Wind speeds are not even around the country, so turbine distribution is not expected to be either. However, there is a long way to go before the turbine distribution reaches parity with the potential.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 07 2018, @04:49AM
I'm color blind, so those damned color coded charts often look like gobbledygook to me
I encountered similar stuff back in the day.
My first computer video setup had no color (Hercules Graphics Card).
It would have been so easy for guys who included drawings in their stuff to have made the different colors also different textures (dots, stripes, crosshatch, etc.).
As my eyesight gets crappier with age, I appreciate developers|webmasters who have their grandpas|handicapped folks check their work.
For similar reasons (empathy with those whose sight is even worse than mine and who require a screenreader), when I link to stuff, I try to use #FragmentIdentifiers to index the page past the navigation and self-promotion and other crap and down to the start of the content.
-- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]