Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park
The Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park is a large wind farm and solar farm under construction south of Port Augusta in South Australia, Australia. The solar farm is planned to be at the northern end of the site, west of the Augusta Highway and immediately south of Sundrop Farms. The wind turbines will be on both sides of the Augusta Highway, extending south as far as the road to Horrocks Pass.[1] Construction formally started in October 2020 and take about 18 months to complete. The total site is about 5,400 hectares (13,000 acres).[2]
Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park | |
---|---|
Country | Australia |
Location | South of Port Augusta, South Australia |
Coordinates | 32°34′01″S 137°51′22″E |
Status | Under construction |
Construction began | October 2020 |
Construction cost | A$500m |
Owner(s) | DP Energy, Iberdrola |
Employees | 20 |
Solar farm | |
Type | Flat-panel PV |
Site resource | 1941 kWh/m2/year (Global horizontal irradiation) |
Wind farm | |
Type | Onshore |
Hub height | 105 metres (344 ft) |
Rotor diameter | 150 metres (492 ft) |
Site area | 5,400 hectares (54.00 km2) |
Power generation | |
Make and model | Vestas V150 |
Units planned | 50 × 4.2 MW |
Units under const. | 50 × 4.2 MW wind turbines, 107 MW solar capacity |
Nameplate capacity | 317 MW |
Capacity factor | 32.4% (expected) |
Annual net output | 900 GWh (expected) |
External links | |
Website | https://parep.com.au/ |
The project was developed by DP Energy, but prior to construction, Spanish company Iberdrola committed to investing A$500 million and will eventually own stage 1 after DP Energy manages its construction.[3]
Stage 1 is planned to comprise 210MW of wind generation and 107MW of solar generation.[4] Stage 2 remains owned by DP Energy and is proposed to include more solar photovoltaic generation and a grid connected battery.[5] The developer claims that the combination of wind, solar, battery and synchronous condensers combine to create a renewable energy power station.[6]
The wind turbines were originally approved to have a maximum height (to the tip of the blades) of 150 metres (490 ft) but in June 2019, this approval was increased to 185 metres (607 ft).[7] The revised plan raises the hub height to 107.5 metres (353 ft), nominal generating capacity of each turbine to 4.5MW, and reduces the number of turbines from 59 to 50.[8] The wind turbines will be supplied by Vestas and solar components supplied by Downer Group.[9]
References
- "Project". Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park. DP Energy. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- "Iberdrola Renewable Energy Park". Port Augusta City Council. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- Russell, Chris (14 January 2020). "$500m from Spanish energy giant Iberdrola kickstarts DP Energy's Port Augusta renewable project". The Advertiser. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- "APPLICATION ON NOTIFICATION –CROWN DEVELOPMENT" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 November 2020. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
- Parkinson, Giles (15 January 2020). "South Australia's biggest wind solar hybrid project gets financial green light". Renew Economy. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- "Stage 2 Project". Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park. DP Energy. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- Green, Amy (19 June 2019). "Energy Park plans: increased turbine height causes concern". The Transcontinental. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- "Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park (Variation)" (PDF). South Australian Planning Commission. 3 April 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- Gameng, onica (14 November 2017). "Vestas and Downer to deliver $600m Port Augusta Renewable Energy Park SA". Retrieved 15 January 2020.