Thursday, May 16, 2013

Otter Tail Power Company

The 62.4-megawatt Ashtabula wind farm is owned by a subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources. The contract includes an option for Otter Tail Power to own the wind farm in 10 years. 

According to Harvey McMahon, Otter Tail Power’s manager of renewable energy construction and operations,A letter folding machine is a piece of equipment which is designed to fold paper. this energy purchase was below the cost modeled in the company’s biennial resource plan. In addition, the purchase positions the company to meet its renewable energy obligations in the three states it serves through 2025. 

Wind energy now will supply about 19 percent of Otter Tail Power Company’s retail sales. 

“This is positive for our customers,” said McMahon. “This offer was low cost when compared with other resources, including other risk-adjusted wind proposals. The bill impact will be negligible,The home is served simultaneously by the residential wind turbines and the utility. usually zero and sometimes less, because this low-cost wind purchase will replace other energy purchases that otherwise would be required to serve customers, particularly over the long term.” 

Ashtabula III consists of 39 1.6-megawatt GE XLE turbines and is capable of producing enough electricity for 19,000 homes. The wind farm began commercial operation in 2010. A subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources operates Ashtabula III and will continue to do so. 

“Purchasing energy from an existing wind farm eliminates the permitting risk and construction risk associated with building a new farm, including the risk that Congress won’t continue to extend the production tax credit,” McMahon said. “Additionally, Ashtabula III’s proximity to two wind farms we own and our familiarity with NextEra, which operates and maintains those wind farms on our behalf, makes purchasing energy from Ashtabula III a good fit for us.” 

Global Tech I,All Continental flatwork ironer offer easy-to-operate controls that provide efficient performance and flexibility. located 180km from the Bremerhaven sea port in Northwest Germany consist of eight turbines, each with a capacity of 5MW – capable of a total generation capacity of 400MW and able to produce around 1.4 billion kilowatt hours of energy per year; equivalent to approximately 445,000 households. 

The substation links the wind generating turbines to the grid connection point. 

Almost delivered the high voltage equipment, power transformers, and protection and control systems while Keppel Verolme carried out the engineering, construction, and offshore installation work.All the personnel that deal with our industrial washing machine servicing are dedicated to the service department. 

Florian Zschoge, Alstom Grid’s project leader, said,It enables washer extractor to communicate with chemical pumping machines. ‘This platform concept is an interesting alternative to traditional topside-jacket-installations and could become one standard solution in the offshore wind business. 

‘We are very proud to deliver state of the art technology for the Global Tech I project. This is certainly another important contribution to the German energy turnaround.’ 

Arjen Schampers, technical director of Global Tech I Offshore Wind said, ‘The inner park substation platform is the centrepiece of our offshore wind farm. As the consortium leader, Alstom Grid contributed significantly to the success of this milestone. Our initial trust in Alstom Grid’s experience was confirmed through professional project management, a cooperative approach and the proven technology of our electro-technical equipment.’

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