Six 100MW-plus projects come online in September

Project commissioning activity continued despite the coronavirus pandemic last month

Xcel Energy's 500MW Cheyenne Ridge was the largest wind farm brought online last month, according to “uåX˜äŠÊ˜·³Ç Intelligence

At least six 100MW-plus onshore wind farms in three different countries were brought online in September, despite challenges caused by the coronavirus pandemic, according to “uåX˜äŠÊ˜·³Ç Intelligence.

Four of these large projects were in the United States, while the other two 100MW-plus projects were commissioned in Sweden and China last month.

These six wind farms had a combined capacity of more than 1.1GW, according to “uåX˜äŠÊ˜·³Ç Intelligence, the research and data division of “uåX˜äŠÊ˜·³Ç, and accounted for just over a third of the capacity brought online globally last month.

This month of large project-commissioning came despite the coronavirus pandemic and subsequent lockdowns and social distancing measures disrupting supply chains and hindering project executions.

Analysts have downgraded forecasts for capacity installations this year due to the pandemic.

Global capacity reached at least 653.7GW by the end of September, according to provisional figures from “uåX˜äŠÊ˜·³Ç Intelligence – an increase of 60.5GW on the preceding 12 months, with 3.2GW added in the last month.

The largest onshore wind farm coming online last month was Xcel Energy’s 500MW Cheyenne Ridge in Colorado, with 229 turbines supplied by Vestas.

The three other US projects were commissioned in three different states: Scout Clean Energy’s 130MW Bitter Ridge in Indiana, Alliant Energy’s 130MW Richland in Iowa and Ørsted’s 103MW Willow Creek Wind (South Dakota) in South Dakota. Developers in the US have been scrambling to start construction or secure tax relief by other means ahead of the impending phaseout of the country’s main support scheme at the end of 2020.

Outside of the US, the largest wind farms to come online in September were Eolus Vind’s 130MW µþ䳦°ì³ó²¹³¾³¾²¹°ù project in central Sweden and the Chinese State Power Investment Corporation’s (SPIC’s) 130MW Gaoshanzhang in the south-east of the country.

Chinese developers also face a phaseout of the country’s feed-in tariff by the end of the year.

Wind farmCapacity (MW)Country
Cheyenne Ridge500United States
Bitter Ridge130United States
Richland130United States
µþ䳦°ì³ó²¹³¾³¾²¹°ù130Sweden
Gaoshanzhang130China
Willow Creek Wind103United States
Leiji50China
Kuidesu48China
Youxi Tangchuan I48China
Excelsior32.5South Africa