Wind farm in Arizona, US
The Dry Lake Wind Power Project in Navajo County is the first utility-scale wind farm in the U.S. state of Arizona . Starting in 2009, it was constructed in two phases having a total generating capacity of 128.1 megawatts (MW), and is selling the electricity to the Salt River Power District (SRP).
History
Around 2003, rancher Bill Elkins began working with developer John Gaglioti and Northern Arizona University scientists to erect measurement towers on his land to measure wind speeds. He studied the local power grid to determine the feasibility of connecting a wind farm. Navajo County and Iberdrola officials credit Gaglioti and Elkins with attracting the first wind farm to Arizona.[ 1]
Project details
Phase 1 (34°39′36″N 110°17′03″W / 34.66000°N 110.28417°W / 34.66000; -110.28417 (Dry Lake Wind Power Project phase I ) ) consists of 30 Suzlon 2.1 MW wind turbines , for a total nameplate capacity of 63 MW.[ 2] Iberdrola Renewables built the wind farm for $100 million. Based on wind measurements before construction began, Iberdrola estimated phase 1 would produce an average of 132,450 MWh annually. Depending on actual performance of phase 1, the company planned to install up to 209 more turbines in future construction phases.[ 1]
Phase 2 (34°36′22″N 110°10′24″W / 34.60611°N 110.17333°W / 34.60611; -110.17333 (Dry Lake Wind Power Project phase II ) ) consists of 31 additional Suzlon turbines for a combined nameplate capacity of 65.1 MW.[ 3] The location of phase 2 is about seven miles (11 km) northwest of Snowflake and three miles (5 km) southeast of phase 1.[ 4]
Electricity production
Dry Lake Wind Project Electricity Generation (MW·h )
Year
Dry Lake 1 (63 MW) [ 5]
Dry Lake 2 (65.1 MW) [ 6]
Total Annual MW·h
2009
29,545*
–
29,545
2010
118,777
16,139*
134,916
2011
124,401
124,330
248,731
2012
112,688
114,097
226,785
2013
107,393
110,934
218,327
2014
117,246
121,525
238,771
2015
104,882
107,261
212,143
2016
112,321
116,380
228,701
2017
123,484
127,022
250,506
Average Annual Production (years 2011-2017) --->
231,995
Average Capacity Factor (years 2011–2017) --->
20.7%
(*) partial year of operation
Environmental effect
According to the USDOE , each 1000 MW of wind power capacity installed in Arizona will save 818 million US gallons (3,100,000 m3 ) of water per year and eliminate 2.0 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions .[ 7] Phase 1 of Dry Lake Wind Power Project would then eliminate:
2
,
000
,
000
tons
×
63
MW
1000
MW
=
126
,
000
tons
{\displaystyle {\frac {2,000,000{\mbox{ tons}}\times 63{\mbox{ MW}}}{1000{\mbox{ MW}}}}=126,000{\mbox{ tons}}}
of carbon dioxide, and save:
818
,
000
,
000
gallons
×
63
MW
1000
MW
=
51
,
534
,
000
gallons
{\displaystyle {\frac {818,000,000{\mbox{ gallons}}\times 63{\mbox{ MW}}}{1000{\mbox{ MW}}}}=51,534,000{\mbox{ gallons}}}
of water annually.
See also
References
^ a b Randazzo, Ryan (2009-05-12). "Harvesting Arizona wind" . Arizona Republic . Retrieved 2010-05-04 .
^ "Dry Lake (US)" . thewindpower.net. Retrieved 2019-04-28 .
^ "Dry Lake II (US)" . thewindpower.net. Retrieved 2019-04-28 .
^ "SRP Buys Entire Output of Iberdrola Renewables' Dry Lake 2 Wind Power Project" . businesswire.com. 2010-03-18. Retrieved 2019-04-28 .
^ "Dry Lake 1, Annual" . Electricity Data Browser . Energy Information Administration . Retrieved 2019-04-28 .
^ "Dry Lake 2, Annual" . Electricity Data Browser . Energy Information Administration . Retrieved 2019-04-28 .
^ Lantz, Eric; Tegen, Suzanne (October 2008). "Economic Benefits, Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Emissions Reductions, and Water Conservation Benefits from 1,000 Megawatts (MW) of New Wind Power in Arizona" (PDF) . EERE , NREL . DOE/GO-102008-2670. Archived from the original (PDF, 514kB) on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2010-05-06 .
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