There's conflicting figures between wind power advocates like GWEC and AWEA and their government lobby vs the people that operate them. For one, the cost of infrastructure isn't factored except by the people that have to pay for it. Due to its variable nature, and the fact that where it's good to put a wind turbine there is no infrastructure, this all costs money and resources. The infrastructure has to be sized for peak wind production to make the turbine worthwhile. But the turbine only produces 24% of nameplate capacity in the real-world industry.
Cost in idle infrastructure to support it is never factored.
The fact that the machine produces WAY less than nameplate is not factored in the energy return on investment by the advocates.
The second problem is that wind power, unlike steam turbines or diesel peaking, can't be scheduled for peak load on the grid system.
The next problem is that the wind power lobby never factored the decommissioning and disposal costs, both environmental and financial, of the machines when they must be replaced. They are built of composites that can't be recycled. There is already landfills in Texas full of blades that have to be replaced as part of the maintenance life cycle when cracks are found during inspections. The decommissioning costs for the 50,000 or so turbines in the U.S. alone is currently estimated at $12.3 billion by the companies that run them. Eventually it comes. They don't last forever. The ones that have been decommissioned so far have not lasted anywhere close to their predicted life cycle.
The bottom line, at least in the U.S., is that without federal subsidies the commercial wind power business is dead. Operators can't make any money with them without those subsidies. And we the taxpayer end up footing the bill both financially and environmentally. Nobody that lives near those wind farms likes 'em. They are an eyesore, they reduce property values, they are noisy, and people complain about shadow flicker when the sun shines thru the blades on their property.
This is what happens to many of them, and this is not widely advertised by the wind power lobby. But this turbine was put in in 2014. It's 20 miles from here, I don't remember what the nameplate capacity is.

It is dead on the tower. There is oil and grease streaked down the blades, it hasn't run since last winter. I was by there last Saturday and they got two big cranes set up and are tearing it down. The operator of it says it hasn't been profitable to run, it's not going to get fixed, they are going to scrap it. It was installed with federal subsidy money that I have to work to pay for.
This is how the wind power advocates bend reality

The actual output of that wind park is not even close 83MW with 11 Enercon turbines. It is approximately 1/4 of that. But that's not what they present in their rosy picture. They use installed capacity instead of actual production. So you can reduce the rosy numbers to 24% of what they claim, because inside the economics of operating one by the people that have to pay for it, that is the real numbers.