First turbine goes up at Te Uku wind farm
First turbine goes up at Te Uku wind
farm
For immediate release: Tuesday
2 November 2010
Construction of the first of 28
wind turbines is underway at the Te Uku wind farm, near
Raglan.
The Te Uku wind farm is a joint alliance between Meridian Energy and community-trust owned electricity lines company, WEL Networks. At maximum capacity, the wind farm will generate 64.4MWs of electricity, enough to power around 30,000 average New Zealand homes.
The turbines will be constructed with the help of a 600 tonne crane, the largest wheeled crane ever seen in New Zealand.
Te Uku wind farm Project Manager, Robert Batters, says each wind turbine takes around two to three days to construct.
“The process takes place in three main steps. The first component assembled is the base tower section. Then the remaining two tower sections, nacelle and hub are lifted into place.
“Finally, each of the three turbine blades is put in place to complete the process,” explains Mr. Batters.
Mr Batters says the first wind turbine is planned to be generating power before Christmas and all 28 turbines will be generating power by March 2011.
The 600 tonne crane being used to construct the turbines was shipped to New Zealand from Denmark by the KR Wind/NZ Crane Group Alliance especially for the job. It arrived at the wind farm site in mid-October, along with 28 truckloads of associated crane parts. Its boom can be extended to 160 metres, but is configured to 102 metres for the Te Uku turbines.
“Despite its size, the crane only has a width of three metres. This meant we could construct the 26 kilometres of roads on the wind farm site to an absolute minimum width, minimising the environmental footprint on the rural landscape,” says Mr Batters.
The 600 tonne crane is being assisted by a 300 tonne crane and two 100 tonne cranes to complete the turbine erection process.
The Te Uku turbines were manufactured at two sites – the towers in Korea and the actual turbine componentry by Siemens in Denmark.
This is the second Meridian Energy wind farm using Siemens turbine components – the first being the West Wind wind farm at Makara near Wellington.
The turbine towers and components began arriving at the Port of Auckland in September and are progressively being transported to the Te Uku wind farm site. The current plan is for the last of the turbine components to be transported to the wind farm site by mid-December.
Turbine Facts and Figures:
• Each turbine, once fully assembled, is 130.5
metres high and weighs 318 tonnes.
• Each turbine
consists of three main parts – the base tower, the nacelle
and the blades.
o Each base tower is 80 metres high and
weighs approximately 169 tonnes.
o The turbine blades are
each 49 metres long and weigh 10.9 tonnes.
o Each nacelle
is 3.5 metres in circumference and weighs 81 tonnes. The
nacelle is the part of the wind turbine that sits on top of
the tower and contains the generator and associated
controls.
• Each of the 28 wind turbines has a maximum
generation capacity of 2.3 megawatts.
• Turbines will
generate electricity in wind speeds of between 14km and 90km
per hour.
First Turbine Erected at Te Uku Wind
Farm:
http://mediacom.nzpa.co.nz/attachments/13748_md13974-pic1.jpg
Turbine
blade about to be lifted in place:
http://mediacom.nzpa.co.nz/attachments/13748_md13974-pic2.jpg
Turbine
blade being assembled to first Wind Turbine at Te Uku:
http://mediacom.nzpa.co.nz/attachments/13748_md13974-pic3.jpg
About
Meridian Energy
Meridian is New Zealand’s largest
electricity generator and currently owns and operates nine
hydro stations and three wind farms within New Zealand, and
one wind farm in Australia:
• Manapouri power
station and eight hydro stations on the Waitaki River in the
South Island
• Te Apiti wind farm near
Palmerston North
• White Hill wind farm in
Southland
• West Wind farm in Wellington
•
Mt Millar wind farm, Eyre Peninsula, South Australia
•
CalRENEW 1 solar farm in Mendota,
California
Internationally, Meridian has operations in
Sydney Australia and San Francisco California. Meridian
recently announced the establishment of a joint venture with
Australian energy company AGL to build what will be the
southern hemisphere's biggest wind farm in southwest
Victoria The 420MW Macarthur wind farm is due for
completion in 2013.
Meridian retails electricity to
around 188,000 customers throughout New Zealand, which
includes households, farms and businesses. It also provides
electricity to New Zealand’s single largest electricity
user, the Rio Tinto Alcan New Zealand Limited aluminium
smelter in Bluff.
Meridian invests strongly in
renewable energy development both in New Zealand and
offshore and has recently commenced construction on the Te
Uku wind farm, in Hamilton, New
Zealand.
ends