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Emu Downs Wind Farm

Coordinates: 30°30′S 115°20′E / 30.5°S 115.33°E / -30.5; 115.33
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Emu Downs Wind Farm
Wind turbine at Emu Downs
Map
CountryAustralia
LocationWestern Australia
Coordinates30°30′S 115°20′E / 30.500°S 115.333°E / -30.500; 115.333
StatusOperational
Construction beganNovember 2005 (2005-11)
Commission dateOctober 2006 (2006-10)
Construction cost$180 million
Owner(s)APA Group
Wind farm
TypeOnshore
Hub height68.5 metres
Rotor diameter82 metres
Power generation
Units operational48
Make and modelVestas V82
Nameplate capacity80 MW
Annual net output262 GWh (2007/08)
External links
Websitehttps://www.apa.com.au/our-services/other-energy-services/wind-farms/
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Emu Downs Solar Farm
Map
Country
  • Australia
LocationAdjacent to Emu Downs Wind Farm
Coordinates30°30′S 115°20′E / 30.5°S 115.33°E / -30.5; 115.33{{#coordinates:}}: cannot have more than one primary tag per page
Commission dateDecember 2017
Construction costA$50 million
Owner(s)APA Group
Solar farm
TypeFlat-panel PV
Collectors75,168
Wind farm
Type
Power generation
Nameplate capacity
  • 80 MW
External links
Websiteapa.com.au/our-business/energy-infrastructure/western-australia.aspx
CommonsRelated media on Commons

The Emu Downs Wind Farm (30°30′S 115°20′E / 30.500°S 115.333°E / -30.500; 115.333) is a 79.2 MW wind farm in Western Australia. It was a joint development between Stanwell Corporation and Griffin Energy. The site is approximately 200 kilometres north of Perth, near Cervantes. Construction of the $180 million project commenced in November 2005, and the project was commissioned in October 2006.[1]

Emu Downs consists of 48 Vestas wind turbines (each with 1.65 MW generating capacity), a substation, interconnection to the main 132 kV electricity grid, administration and stores buildings, and a network of access roads. The wind farm is close to the coast, with a good quality wind resource that has increased wind speeds and reliability aligning with periods for peak power demand.[1] The prevailing wind blows from the east in the mornings and the Fremantle Doctor from the west in the afternoons.[2]

The wind farm provides electricity to the grid. 260 km (160 mi) to the south there is the Kwinana Desalination Plant, located just south of Perth, and turns water from the Indian Ocean into nearly 152 million litres (40 million gallons) of drinking water per day.[3]

Emu Downs is accredited under the Australian Government's Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 and as a Green Power Generator by the Sustainable Energy Development Authority.[1]

In June 2011, the wind farm was acquired by the APA Group for $170 million from the failed Griffin Group.[4]

Solar farm

When APA group bought Emu Downs, it realised that there is usually a drop in output in the middle of the day as the wind changes. To balance that and achieve better utilisation of transmission infrastructure, APA has installed a 20MW solar farm on the same site. Its peak output is during the time when the wind farm is not at full capacity, so no additional capacity was needed in the substation or grid connection point. The solar farm has 75,000 photovoltaic solar panels on a 70-hectare site adjacent to the wind farm. It cost A$50 million (including a federal government grant of A$5.5 million) and began operation in December 2017. The output of both the solar and wind farms is contracted to Synergy until 2030.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Emu Downs Wind Farm" (PDF). APA Group. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  2. ^ a b "WA's first co-located wind and solar farm completed at Emu Downs". Australian Renewable Energy Agency. 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  3. ^ Sullivan, Michael (18 June 2007). "Australia Turns to Desalination Amid Water Shortage". NPR. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  4. ^ Bennet, Michael (25 June 2011). "Gas player APA's $170m Emu Downs wind farm buy confuses analysts". The Australian. Retrieved 29 October 2013.