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February 2017

LM Wind Power Pledges To Become Carbon Neutral by 2018

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LM Wind Power, the world’s largest, independent manufacturer of wind-turbine blades recently announced it plans to be carbon neutral by 2018, making it one of the first in the wind industry to take such a step. It will begin by sourcing 100 percent of its electricity from renewable energy sources during 2017.

With the ambition to eliminate and offset the CO2 emissions from its own operations by 2018, LM Wind Power joins an exclusive group of corporate leaders committed to demonstrating the leadership and action required to keep global warming below 2 degrees C, and setting new standards to accelerate the de-carbonization of the wind industry’s own supply chain.

LM Wind Power has produced more than 185,000 blades since the company began blade operations in 1978. This corresponds to approximately 77 GW of installed wind-power capacity, which each year effectively replaces about 147 million metric tons of CO2. This corresponds to the annual CO2 emissions from electricity used in 20 million (U.S.) homes.

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“When we signed the UN Global Compact in 2010, we argued that LM Wind Power might be the greenest company in the world with more than 20 percent of all turbines worldwide flying LM blades,” said LM Wind Power CEO Marc de Jong.  “But we also asked some tough questions — are we really green enough?  It’s a paradox that the industry has not addressed this more coherently before. Could we not reduce our own carbon footprint further and do even more to nurture the growth of wind energy globally? Our carbon neutrality ambition by 2018 is the clear response to that challenge. Our customers, our host governments, the communities where we operate, and above all, our employees, are all behind us in this ambitious plan.  In so doing, we will truly live our company vision that ‘Together, we capture the wind to power a cleaner world.’”

The three main components of LM Wind Power’s carbon neutral program, which will be named “CleanLM” are:

Reductions in the company’s carbon emissions through operational efficiencies, for example, an internal drive to reduce energy consumption and waste.

Using 100 percent renewable electricity, particularly from wind, in conjunction with partners and customers and effective from 2017.

Offsetting our remaining emissions through carbon credits and building low carbon sustainable development through the delivery of clean and renewable energy for communities in developing countries.

The company has implemented several sustainability initiatives in recent years with the aim of driving innovation and ensuring the long-term viability of the business. The bold ambition to become carbon neutral in 2018 is a core component of a wider program that includes implementing life-cycle thinking in the design of future generations of wind-turbine blades, an active focus on chemical substitution in manufacturing and end of life disposal. 

Source: LM Wind Power

For more information, go to www.lmwindpower.com

CEE Group Acquires a 19.8 MW Wind Farm

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The Hamburg-based CEE Group continues to expand its wind portfolio and is acquiring the Gollenberg wind farm under construction in Rheinland-Pfalz. The seller is Juwi Energieprojekte GmbH, which is also responsible for the construction stage as general contractor. The wind farm comprises six Vesta V126 turbines. The hub height is 137 meters, the rotor diameter is 126 meters, and the wind farm’s total capacity amounts to 19.8 MW.

After commissioning, the turbines will supply environmentally friendly power to about 15,000 households each year. The wind farm was expected to be fully connected to the grid at the end of January.

CEE Operations, which manages the CEE Group’s power plant portfolio, will be responsible for commercial operations. Juwi Operations and Maintenance GmbH will assume responsibility for technical operations. This is the fifth project the CEE Group and Juwi have implemented jointly.

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“By acquiring Gollenberg, CEE has also managed to continue the growth strategy in the wind segment in Germany in an extremely challenging market environment,” said Detlef Schreiber, CEE Group’s CEE. “Together with our reliable partners, we also intend to continue to grow outside our core markets.”

“The Gollenberg wind farm clearly demonstrates that turbines can be operated profitably in the long term even at so-called low-wind sites thanks to modern inland technology,” said Michael Class, Juwi Group’s CEO. “We are very pleased to have implemented this project with the CEE Group.”

The Gollenberg wind farm increases the CEE Group’s renewables portfolio to about 556 MW. In 2017, CEE’s energy plants are expected to produce about 880,000 MWh of power from renewable sources.

The Juwi Group is one of the world’s leading companies in the area of renewable energy.

The renewable energy pioneer with a strong regional presence offers project development and EPC services as well as products and solutions for the energy turnaround. Company activities are mainly projects with solar and wind.

So far, Juwi has realized more than 900 wind turbines with a total capacity of more than 2,000 MW at more than 150 sites globally. 

Source: CEE Group

For more information, go to cee-group.de

Lagerwey Building the First L136 4.5 MW Turbines for Growind

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Wind-turbine manufacturer Lagerwey has received an order from Growind to build two L136 4.5 MW wind turbines in the Eemshaven in the northern part of the Netherlands. The L136 is the largest onshore IECII platform on the market.

Lagerwey’s latest turbine has greater onshore capacity than any other. While other platforms are only capable of withstanding average wind speeds of up to 7.5 meters per second, Lagerwey’s turbines can handle up to 8.5 m/s. This reduces the cost per kWh generated.

The Lagerwey turbines will replace two old wind turbines in the port of Eeshaven, which already have been dismantled. In January, the new foundations for the L136s were constructed in the same locations.

Construction work on the first new turbine will begin in March. This turbine will be completed by the end of April, creating enough energy for more than 5,000 households.

The second turbine will be constructed at the end of 2017 using the Lagerwey Climbing Crane. It will be the first time the Climbing Crane will be used following its presentation in June 2016.

The turbines have a hub height of 132 meters and a rotor diameter of 136 meters, resulting in a tip height of just more than 200 meters, making them the tallest onshore wind turbines in the Netherlands. 

Source: Lagerwey

For more information, go to www.lagerwey.com

Allete Clean Energy Plans Expansion of North Dakota Wind Farm

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Allete Clean Energy, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Allete, Inc. will work with Montana-Dakota Utilities (MDU) to expand the Thunder Spirit wind farm in North Dakota, reaching the 150-MW permitted capacity of the facility Allete Clean Energy developed in 2014 and 2015.

Allete Clean Energy secured a 25-year power purchase agreement with MDU to purchase energy from the expansion near Hettinger, North Dakota, about 100 miles southwest of Bismarck.

Under the agreement, MDU, a division of MDU Resources Group also has the option to purchase the expansion when it is complete as it did with the first phase of Thunder Spirit.

In 2014, Allete Clean Energy acquired the rights to build the 107.5-MW first phase of Thunder Spirit, which comprises 43 turbines and generates enough electricity to power about 30,000 homes. After the project was completed in 2015, MDU bought Thunder Spirit from Allete Clean Energy for $200 million and operates the wind farm for its customers.

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MDU granted Allete Clean Energy the right to develop the 13- to 16-turbine Thunder Spirit expansion, with major construction on the $85 million project expected to start in May 2018. Allete Clean Energy has qualified the Thunder Spirit expansion site for federal renewable energy production tax credits.

“We are pleased MDU has selected us to expand the Thunder Spirit Wind project and look forward to partnering with them, area landowners, and Adams County officials as well as North Dakota regulators on this exciting project that will deliver additional carbon-free energy to serve its customers,” said Allan S. Rudeck Jr., president of Allete Clean Energy. “This transaction strengthens Allete Clean Energy’s renewable energy repertoire and is consistent with ACE’s multipronged growth strategy to expand its clean energy project portfolio by pursuing acquisitions and new builds with long-term power sales agreements, build-transfers, and renewal investments of existing facilities.”

The Thunder Spirit expansion helps MDU meet its energy needs.

“Our relationship with Allete Clean Energy on the first phase of Thunder Spirit Wind proved to be a winning formula,” said MDU President and CEO Nicole Kivisto. “We are in need of additional energy to meet our growing demands, and with the easements, interconnection to the grid, and permits already in place from the first phase of Thunder Spirit Wind, it makes this a great project for Montana-Dakota.”

In addition to developing this expansion for MDU, Allete Clean Energy owns and operates wind generation facilities in Minnesota, Iowa, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. 

Source: Allete Clean Energy

For more information, go to www.allete.com

122,000 Acres of Offshore North Carolina up for Auction

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Furthering President Barack Obama’s comprehensive Climate Action Plan to create American jobs, develop domestic clean energy resources, and cut carbon pollution, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) Acting Director Walter Cruickshank recently announced that 122,405 acres offshore Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, will be offered in a commercial wind lease sale March 16.

“(The) announcement demonstrates how our collaborative efforts with Federal, state, and local partners over the past eight years have built a foundation to harness the enormous potential of offshore wind energy,” Jewell said. “The lease sale underscores the growing market demand for renewable energy and strong industry interest in meeting that demand.”

The Kitty Hawk lease sale is the latest effort in the Obama Administration’s renewable energy program at the U.S. Department of the Interior, which recently marked the operational launch of the nation’s first offshore wind farm off the coast of Rhode Island, and the lease sale for more than 79,000 acres offshore New York. To date, BOEM has held six competitive lease sales, which have generated more than $58 million in high bids for more than 1 million acres in federal waters.

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The Kitty Hawk lease area begins about 24 nautical miles from shore and extends 25.7 nautical miles in a general southeast direction. Its seaward extent ranges from 13.5 nautical miles in the north to 0.6 of a nautical mile in the south.

“This is a significant milestone for North Carolina and our country as we continue to make progress on diversifying our nation’s energy portfolio,” Cruickshank said. “BOEM looks forward to overseeing a successful lease sale in March, to contribute to the region’s energy supply and assist local governments in achieving their goals for energy independence and job creation.”

The announcement also identified nine companies BOEM has deemed legally, technically, and financially qualified to participate in the upcoming lease sale:

  • Avangrid Renewables, LLC
  • Enbridge Holdings (Green Energy) LLC
  • Shell WindEnergy Inc.
  • Northland Power America Inc.
  • Wind Future LLC
  • Outer Banks Ocean Energy, LLC
  • PNE Wind USA, Inc.
  • Statoil Wind US LLC
  • wpd offshore Alpha LLC

The Final Sale Notice contains relevant information, such as deadlines and milestones for bidders, the area available for leasing, lease provisions and conditions, auction details, criteria for evaluating bids, award procedures, and lease execution.

Under the terms of the Final Sale Notice, which was published in the Federal Register on January 19, the lease area will be auctioned as Lease OCS-A 0508.

In September 2015, BOEM published a revised environmental assessment (EA) for commercial wind-lease issuance and related activities within the three North Carolina Wind Energy Areas (WEA) (i.e., Kitty Hawk WEA, Wilmington East WEA, and Wilmington West WEA) offshore North Carolina. The EA considers reasonably foreseeable environmental and socioeconomic impacts from issuing a renewable energy lease and conducting site characterization (e.g., surveys) and assessment (e.g., installation and operation of meteorological towers and buoys) activities in the designated offshore area.

As a result of the analysis in the revised EA, BOEM issued a Finding of No Significant Impact, which concluded that reasonably foreseeable environmental effects associated with the issuance of commercial wind leases and related activities would not significantly affect the environment.

The Wilmington East and Wilmington West WEAs, due to their proximity and shared attributes, have been coupled with the planning and leasing process for the South Carolina Call Areas. 

Source: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

For more information, go to www.boem.gov/North-Carolina

Pattern Development Completes Financing for Wind Project in Japan

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Pattern Energy Group LP (Pattern Development) and Green Power Investment Corporation (GPI) have completed financing of the 33 MW Green Power Otsuki GK (Ohorayama Wind) power project. Pattern Development and GPI are joint venture  partners on the Ohorayama Wind project in Kochi Prefecture, Japan.

“We are making steady progress on our commitment to develop 1,000 MW of new renewable energy sources in Japan, demonstrating the value of our partnership with GPI,” said Mike Garland, president and CEO of Pattern Development. “Together with GPI we have completed two solar facilities in Japan and are moving forward on Ohorayama Wind. We also have a broad and deep pipeline of new wind and solar projects, including several in the advanced stages of development.”

“Ohorayama is our first wind project to reach financial close and start construction since we joined hands with Pattern in early 2014,” said Toshio Hori, CEO and founder of GPI. “This achievement is a reflection of the effectiveness of our partnership, and we are excited about further executing on our portfolio of mature development assets. We expect our next project, a 126 MW wind farm in Aomori prefecture, to reach financial close and commence construction by mid-2017.  It is anticipated to be the largest wind project in Japan.”

Ohorayama Wind has a 20-year power purchase agreement with Shikoku Electric Power Company for 100 percent of the output from the facility. The project is under construction and expected to reach completion in March of 2018.

In 2016, Pattern Development and GPI announced the completion of two solar power projects in Japan — the 14 MW Kanagi Solar PV facility in Shimane prefecture of Japan, and the 42 MW Futtsu Solar PV facility in Japan’s prefecture of Chiba.

Affiliate company Pattern Energy Group Inc. has previously added the Ohorayama Wind facility to its list of identified Right of First Offer (ROFO) projects. 

Source: Pattern Development

For more information, go to www.patterndev.com

Big Help in a Small Package

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Wind turbines continue to get bigger. The downside is that as they get bigger, they also get heavier.

But promising research being done at American University in Washington, D.C., is finding the world of plants may hold the answer in not only making turbine pieces lighter, but also using a renewable resource to accomplish that goal.

It’s called nanocellulose.

“Nanocellulose is simply cellulose fibers that have a width scale that’s typically 20 nanometers or smaller,” said Douglas Fox, associate professor of the Department of Chemistry at American University.

Nanocellulose is typically divided into two types: nanofiber and a nanocrystal.

“The nanofiber can be very long,” Fox said. “It can be upwards of several microns and perhaps even longer than that, whereas the nanocrystals are typically no longer than 100 to 200 nanometers. The difference between the two is that the crystal tends to have slightly higher crystallinity because if you hydrolyze the nanofiber, then you can get these slightly more crystalline types of entities. So you either have longer, which are better to bridge crack propagation, or you have shorter ones that are stiffer. Depending on what your application is, you choose one or the other.”

Wind Application

For the wind industry, that application would mean replacing the filler used in turbine blades, making them lighter.

“In wind, the wind-turbine blades right now are made from epoxy composites,” Fox said. “And they are primarily glass filled. And the problem is, as you start to get to longer and longer blades, it gets more difficult to use glass. You’re starting to find a limit simply because of the weight of the glass. There has been some experimenting into combining carbon fibers in place of the glass fibers and again that is certainly where you would find using cellulose as a viable alternative to the carbon.”

The nanocellulose is lighter and also comes from a renewable resource, so it becomes more environmentally friendly as well, according to Fox.

“Glass is quite heavy,” he said. “So when you put it into plastics, you’re adding weight to the material. Cellulose is very light. It has the lowest density of those type materials. And it ends up having higher strength as well than the glass, especially when you do it on a per weight basis.”

Carbon Alternative

Nanocellulose is a viable alternative to carbon, too.

“One of the things that is potentially improved by going to cellulose from carbon is that you can improve toughness in addition to tensile strength, all while reducing the weight of the composite” Fox said. “Another advantage for cellulose over carbon is that nanocellulose, depending on how you make it, could reduce some of the processing. Some reports show that cellulose is cheaper than carbon.”

However, Fox cautions that as of now, the cost factor is difficult to judge.

“There’s work on the way to try and increase production as more and more applications are becoming available,” Fox said. “But the smaller production size makes it kind of hard to judge cost between them at this time. The materials are very comparable in strength and in stiffness, and cellulose is a renewable resource, whereas carbon, most of the time, is coming initially from a petroleum-based polymer.”

Challenges

However, the new technology is not without its challenges. Cellulose has a tendency to aggregate, especially when it’s dry, Fox said.

“So once you dry it you want to be able to redisperse it,” he said.

Cellulose is hydrophilic, whereas most polymers are hydrophobic.

“So you have an interfacial problem where you’re trying to maximize the interaction between two materials that are principally dissimilar,” Fox said.

In some applications, the way cellulose is made with acid lowers its thermal stability.

“So you do have a temperature limitation on it,” Fox said. “It won’t affect most epoxy systems; however, ones that have higher curing temperatures or things that are thermal plastics, you have to worry about degradation.”

And the primary challenge is actually the water absorption, according to Fox.

“Cellulose really likes water, creating a problem in composites, especially outdoors where you might have freeze/thaw situations,” he said. “And the work we’re doing is addressing those problems. We’ve developed a method that simultaneously addresses all of them. Initial results are encouraging, showing improvement in all four properties.”

Nanocellulose already is being used in some applications, according to Fox. Most notably is its use in curing cement, speeding up the process and increasing early strength.

Other applications are probably five to 10 years away, he said.

In the interim, the advantages of nanocellulose will need to be expressed to an industry accustomed to working with glass and carbon.

“You have to show that it’s a viable alternative,” Fox said. “You have to show that it can perform as well, or the industry is not going to embrace it. Alternatively, the driver to keep industry interested in it is that it’s a renewable resource. It can potentially be cheaper, because it is renewable. And, it’s lighter, and that can reduce operating costs.”

Other Uses

Making lighter wind turbines is not the only potential use for nanocellulose. Fox said many industries possibly could get a boost from this field.

“Cellulose is a very good oxygen barrier in most plastics,” he said. “You could potentially reduce the cost in packaging.  Right now if you want a good oxygen barrier, you have to use multi-layer film processing where you’re using a very expensive polymer as your oxygen-blocking material.”

Cellulose is also nontoxic, so it could be used in relation to food-type products.

Research also is being done using cellulose in medical implants, according to Fox.

“I’ve used cellulose as flame retardants,” Fox said. “You do have to modify it in some way, but it doesn’t burn as quickly as plastic. You can modify it to enhance that capability.”

The nanofiber is also being used in the paper industry.

“One of the reasons why is because a very small addition of nanofiber increases the strength of the paper,” Fox said.

Polymer Composites

Fox started working with polymer composites after college, specifically working with clay to reduce the flammability of plastics.

“Since I always had an interest in the environment, my projects always revolve around sustainability,” Fox said. “I read several articles on cellulose being a good charring agent, so I started working with cellulose as a flame retardant. I’ve used other plant materials as well as I’ve gone along. Again, I’m trying to keep with natural products to reduce the flammability of polymers. As I was considering other materials, one of the things that came to mind is that carbon nanotubes are very good flame retardants. So I wanted to investigate the use of cellulose nanocrystals, which are similar in size, but sustainable alternatives. It turns out that, on their own, they are not that good as flame retardants, but it did lead into looking at nanocrystals in polymers for other applications. So … that’s kind of where it had its genesis.”

NIST Collaboration

Fox credits a good collaboration with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) that has enabled a lot of the nanocellulose research to get accomplished.

“The collaborations with NIST are very good for bridging research with commercial applications.  Part of their mission is to promote U.S. industries because it’s part of the Department of Commerce,” Fox said. “And the collaborations with leading scientists at NIST are a large part of what’s moved this research forward.”

And Fox said that research has made significant improvement toward addressing issues that have hindered the use of cellulose nanocrystals in wind turbines in the past.

“In my lab, and in other research groups using different approaches, we are all moving toward addressing the commercialization barriers so it can be used in polymer composites, such as those found in automobiles and wind-turbine blades,” Fox said.