Osório wind farm

Osório wind farm

The Osório wind farm.
Location of Osório wind farm in Brazil
Official name Parque Eólico de Osório
Country Brazil
Location Osório, Rio Grande do Sul
Coordinates 29°55′05″S 50°18′44″W / 29.91806°S 50.31222°W / -29.91806; -50.31222Coordinates: 29°55′05″S 50°18′44″W / 29.91806°S 50.31222°W / -29.91806; -50.31222
Status Operational
Commission date 2006
Operator(s) Ventos do Sul Energia
Wind farm
Type Onshore
Site area 13,000 ha (130 km2)
Hub height 98 m (322 ft)
Rotor diameter 70 m (230 ft)
Power generation
Units operational 75 x 2 MW
Make and model Wobben Windpower: E-70/2000 kW
Nameplate capacity 150 MW
Capacity factor 34%

The Osório wind farm (Parque Eólico de Osório in Portuguese) is a wind farm in Brazil, located near the city of Osório, Rio Grande do Sul.

The farm covers 13,000 hectares (32,000 acres) divided into three lots (Osório proper, Índios and Sangradouro) separated by nature conservation strips 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) wide. It consists of 75 wind turbines of 2 MW, giving 150 MW of installed capacity and about 51 MW of effective capacity (enough for a city of 240,000 inhabitants). The capacity factor is 34%, slightly above the word's average (30%). At the time of its completion (2007), it was the largest wind farm in Latin America and the second-largest in the world.[1]

The first 25 towers started operating in 2006, and the remaining ones in 2007. Its construction took 15 months and cost approximately US$310 million (670 million reais), that is, about US$2 million per installed MW and $6 million per effective MW. The farm is owned and operated by Ventos do Sul Energia, a company owned by Spanish Enerfin/Enervento of the Elecnor group (90%), German Wobben Windpower, a subsidiary of Enercon (9%), and Brazilian CIP Brasil (1%). The Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) financed 69% of the cost.

Details

The area of the farm was originally part marshland, which required building drainage channels, lowering the water table, levelling and land filling.[2] The farm contains 24 kilometres (15 mi) of service roads.[2]

The 75 towers are laid in a single straight row in the Osório section, and in two rows each in the Índios and Sangradouro sections, with 175 metres (574 ft) spacing between towers.[1] Each tower is 98 metres (322 ft) tall and weighs 810 tons; it was assembled on site from 24 sections in prestressed concrete and a final steel section, all made in Gravataí. Each tower rests on a massive buried base with 430 cubic metres (15,000 cu ft) of concrete and 50 tons of rebar, supported by 32 piles 20–35 metres (66–115 ft) deep and 50 centimetres (20 in) wide.[2]

The wind turbines are over 70 metres (230 ft) in diameter and reach to 140 metres (460 ft) above ground. Their blades, 35 metres (115 ft) long, were manufactured in Sorocaba (SP) by Wobben Windpower.

The gearboxes and generators (Wobben Windpower model E-70/2000 kW) were imported and weigh 100 tons each. The generator can produce up to 2 MW of continuous current at 400 V, which is converted in the windmill itself to alternating current at 60 Hz and 34.5 kV. Buried cables then take the power to the farm's substation, where it is stepped up to 230 kV and sent to the regional power grid through an 8-kilometre (5.0 mi) power line.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 Éride Moura (2007) "A força do vento" Revista Construção e Mercado, número 71, Junho de 2007 (in Portuguese).
  2. 1 2 3 4 (2009) "Osório vai alavancar energia eólica no Brasil". "O Empreiteiro" magazine, issue 481, November 01, 2009 (in Portuguese).

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