Cathedral Rocks Wind Farm Explained

Cathedral Rocks Wind Farm
Coordinates:-34.85°N 170°W
Location:Lower Eyre Peninsula, South Australia
Owner:EnergyAustralia and Acciona
Status:O
Ps Units Operational:33
Ps Units Manu Model:Vestas
Ps Electrical Capacity:66 MW
Construction Began:2004
Commissioned:2007
Wind Farm Type:Onshore
Wind Site Usage:farmland
Wind Hub Height:60
Wind Rotor Diameter:80

Cathedral Rocks Wind Farm is a wind power station located about 30 km west of Port Lincoln in South Australia, near the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula. It has 33 wind turbines of 2 MW each, with a combined generating capacity of 66 MW of electricity. The site covers an area of about 29 km2, with a coastal exposure of nearly 11 km and is private farming land.[1] The wind farm was commissioned in September 2005.[2]

Before the wind farm was built, extensive environmental and cultural studies were conducted. Surveys undertaken included the assessment of potential impacts to Aboriginal and European cultural heritage, flora, visual amenity, noise levels, birds and other animals. Construction of the wind farm was undertaken with consideration for the environment.

Construction started in 2004, and the first turbines were commissioned in late 2005. The wind farm was fully operational by 2007.[3] It is operated by a joint venture between EnergyAustralia and Acciona Energy.

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Notes and References

  1. Hydro Tasmania (c2005). Cathedral Rocks Wind Farm
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20091027104046/http://geocities.com/daveclarkecb/Australia/WindPower.html Wind power and wind farms in South Australia
  3. Web site: Renewable Energy: Cathedral Rocks Wind Farm EnergyAustralia. EnergyAustralia. 2015-12-28.