Blayney Wind Farm Explained

Blayney Wind Farm
Location Map Caption:Location of Blayney Wind Farm in New South Wales
Coordinates:-33.6219°N 149.1983°W
Country:Australia
Location:Blayney, New South Wales
Status:O
Commissioned:October 2000
Cost:A$18 million
Owner:Tilt Renewables
Ps Units Operational:15 X 660kW
Ps Units Manu Model:Vestas

V47

Wind Hub Height:450NaN0
Wind Rotor Diameter:470NaN0
Wind Farm Type:onshore
Ps Electrical Capacity:9.9 MW

The Blayney wind farm is a wind power station at Lake Carcoar, south of Blayney, New South Wales, Australia. It was acquired by Trustpower in 2014, and is now owned by Tilt Renewables. Blayney has fifteen wind turbines, with a total nameplate capacity of 9.9 MW of electricity.[1]

Technical information

Pacific Power International developed the wind farm, and Consolidated Power Projects Australia was the construction contractor.[1] Project cost was A$18 million.[1] The Minister for Energy, Kim Yeadon, opened the wind farm in October, 2000.[2] The wind farm will avoid the emission of 400,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide[3] over the 20 year life[1] of the project, compared to the equivalent electricity generation from coal.

At the time of construction in 2000, Blayney was the largest wind farm in Australia,[4] but has since been exceeded by several other Australian wind farms, and is fairly small by modern world standards as wind farm sizes grew rapidly through the 2000s. The wind turbines are Vestas V47-660 kW models, with hub height and rotor diameter.[1] The wind farm stands above Lake Carcoar and the Carcoar dam, a popular recreational area. A public viewing area and interpretive centre is open to visitors.[5]

The wind farm is on two properties whose families have grazed livestock for many years, and royalty payments to the landowners supplement their incomes. Livestock continue to graze the land up to the turbine tower bases. Pacific Power International conducted an environmental impact study before construction, to minimise impacts on human activities and wildlife.[1]

The wind farm's output feeds the grid, and creates renewable energy credits.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Blayney Wind Farm . December 2000 . EcoGeneration Magazine . 2008-11-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080726130759/http://www.bcse.org.au/docs/Project%20Profiles/Blayney%20Wind%20Farm.pdf . 26 July 2008 . dead .
  2. Web site: Blayney Wind Farm . Parliament of New South Wales . 2000-11-02 . 2008-11-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110524171024/http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/hansart.nsf/V3Key/LA20001102034 . 24 May 2011 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: Blayney Fact Sheet . . 2008-11-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080720074546/http://www.eraring-energy.com.au/docs/Blayney-fact-sheet.pdf . 20 July 2008 . dead . dmy .
  4. Web site: Large Scale Wind Turbines in Australia . 2008-11-26 . Research Institute for Sustainable Energy.
  5. Web site: Destination: Blayney . 2008-11-26 . Plan Book Travel Australia . 2 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081202190124/http://www.planbooktravel.com.au/australia/nsw/blayney . dead .