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Project in Turkey to use 1.6 MW units

By Paul Dvorak | May 24, 2012

The 50-MW Tayakadin project supports the Turkish government’s plans to increase the country’s wind energy production to 20,000 MWs by 2023 and by using GE 1.6 MW turbines like this one.

U.S. OEM will supply 31 of its 1.6-100 wind turbines for Fina Enerji’s Tayakadin wind project in Istanbul, Turkey. The project will mark the first European installation of the GE 1.6-100 machine, which offers the highest efficiency of any wind turbine in its class.

The 50-MW Tayakadin project supports the Turkish government’s plans to increase the country’s wind energy production to 20,000 MWs by 2023. Turkey has one of the most favorable locations in Europe for wind-energy development, with a potential wind generation capacity of about 48,000 MWs. Much of that potential remains untapped, as the country’s existing wind farms produce about 1,800 MWs.

With a 100-m rotor diameter and 80-m hub height, the company says the 1.6-100 provides the highest capacity factor of any wind turbine for class 3 sites. Fina Enerji currently has 35 units of GE 2.5-100 wind turbines in operation at two wind power plant sites in Izmir and Hatay provinces for a total capacity of 87.5 MW. Tayakadin, near the booming city of Istanbul, is the third site where Fina Enerji will employ GE wind turbines.

In addition to the wind turbines, GE will supply commissioning and technical advisory services for the Tayakadin project. Fina will do the installation and civil works of the project. The wind turbines will be shipped from GE’s Salzbergen, Germany facility by the end of 2012, with completion of the project expected by the first quarter of 2013.

GE Energy
www.ge-energy.com


Filed Under: Construction, News, Projects

 

About The Author

Paul Dvorak

Comments

  1. Prof Dr Mechthild Nagel says

    October 4, 2012 at 9:46 pm

    Dear Mr Dvorak,
    I am working on a comparative analysis of windturbines such as GE 1.6-100. Have you actually found independent evidence that it provides the highest capacity factor in its class?

    thank you,
    Mecke Nagel

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