Wind power viable in western Illinois


NFPA 70E Training

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$199
Coupon Price:
$149
Reserve Your Seat Today
The executive director of the Illinois Chamber Energy Council, Tom Wolf, shared ideas for present and future energy demands and options while talking with the Government Relations Committee of the Macomb Chamber of Commerce.

Wolf's presentation was especially timely considering McDonough County is considering placement of a wind farm in the northern part of the county.

Wolf said Illinois is ranks 16th in the country for potential wind power and that wind farms are and will be successful in the state.

"There's no polluting, it's sustainable. Once you build a wind turbine, the source of the energy is free," he said. "The U.S. government hasn't found a way to tax wind... yet."

Illinois is second only to Texas when it comes to the number of wind farms in development. Wolf also shared the downside of hosting a wind farm: when there's no wind there is no energy.

"There is no ideal source of energy that is reliable, cheap, available and has as little environmental impact as possible," Wolf said.

Wind aside, Wolf also discussed other forms of energy including coal, nuclear, natural gas, crude oil, ethanol, and solar. Illinois' energy comes from 52-percent coal, 45-percent nuclear, 2-percent natural and 1-percent renewable sources.

The nuclear percentage is the highest out of all states and well above the national average of 20 percent.

Wolf also shared the importance of coal in Illinois.

"When people say 'Illinois is the Saudi Arabia of coal,' for once it's not public relations b.s.; it's actually true," he said. "To be realistic, clean coal right now does not exist. The technology to try to create that is there. If we could get this to work, it could be an amazing part of our energy pie."

An 'energy pie' is what Wolf foresees as the future of energy in Illinois, the U.S. and globally. While some believe you could do away with certain forms of energy, Wolf said that would be impossible.

"Some people just assume if you build 50 wind farms you can get rid of coal," he said.

Regardless of what energy form is harnessed for Illinois' future, Wolf said the impact on the state would be positive and a definite step in the right direction for the economy.

"You can call them green jobs or whatever you want - whether it's a coal plant, a nuclear plant, a pipeline bringing oil from Canada, a wind farm or solar at home - all those have economic development (potential) especially in this economy," said Wolf. "The more we remind people of that; that it's not just about having a reliable supply of energy, the more we benefit economically as well."

Related News

Irving Oil invests in electrolyzer to produce hydrogen from water

Irving Oil hydrogen electrolyzer expands green hydrogen capacity at the Saint John refinery with Plug…
View more

ERCOT Issues RFP to Procure Capacity to Alleviate Winter Concerns

ERCOT Winter Capacity RFP seeks up to 3,000 MW through generation and demand response to…
View more

USAID Delivers Mobile Gas Turbine Power Plant to Ukraine

USAID GE Mobile Power Plant Ukraine supplies 28MW of emergency power and distributed generation to…
View more

China power cuts: What is causing the country's blackouts?

China Energy Crisis drives electricity shortages, power cuts, and blackouts as coal prices surge, carbon-neutrality…
View more

Greening Ontario's electricity grid would cost $400 billion: report

Ontario Electricity Grid Decarbonization outlines the IESO's net-zero pathway: $400B investment, nuclear expansion, renewables, hydrogen,…
View more

Carbon emissions fall as electricity producers move away from coal

Global Electricity Emissions Decline highlights a 2% drop as coal power falls, while wind and…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified