GE Renewable Energy Begins Shipping Its First Offshore Wind Turbine Nacelles to the United States
- GE Renewable Energy is shipping its first offshore wind turbine nacelles, produced in France in its
Saint-Nazaire plant, to the Block Island Wind Farm, the first offshore wind farm in the United States.
- The GE plant in Saint-Nazaire is getting ready to produce 66 Haliade turbines for Germany and 238
turbines for French wind farms.
The GE Renewable Energy offshore wind turbine plant in Saint-Nazaire (France) is completing the manufacturing of its first
commercial series of Haliade™ Offshore wind turbine nacelles. The five 370-ton nacelles are scheduled to begin their voyage
to the United States in the coming days. They will equip the Block Island Wind Farm, the first of its kind in the U.S.
The Block Island project is situated off the coast of Block Island, Rhode Island on the East Coast of the United States. The
Haliade™ turbines, ordered by Deepwater Wind, will be installed starting in August. With a total capacity of 30 MW, the
Block Island Wind Farm will produce 125,000 MWh of electricity per year, enough to supply electric power to 17,000 households. It
will be connected to the grid by the end of 2016.
“This marks a milestone for the company and we are proud to contribute to the Block Island project, the first offshore wind farm
in the United States. This demonstrates our readiness to respond to expanding international demand. We are well positioned to
become a major player in offshore wind energy, and to lead in the energy transition across the world,” said Anders Soe-Jensen, CEO
of GE Renewable Energy’s Offshore Wind unit.
“We’re proud that America’s first offshore wind farm will feature, in GE’s Haliade turbine, some of the world’s most innovative
offshore wind technology,” said Deepwater Wind CEO Jeffrey Grybowski.
The industrial site at Saint-Nazaire, inaugurated in December 2014, was designed to produce up to 100 turbines per year.
The Saint-Nazaire plant will also be the assembly site for 66 wind turbines intended for the Merkur wind farm in Germany,
followed by the 238 turbines slated to equip the three French wind farms in Saint-Nazaire, Courseulles-sur-Mer and Fécamp,
installed by EDF Energies Nouvelles.
The Haliade™ turbine was specifically designed for a marine environment. Thanks to its 150-metre blades, its output is 15%
higher than the offshore turbines of the same generation. Producing 6 MW of power, it is capable of supplying the equivalent of
5,000 households per year, with annual CO2 savings of more than 21,000 tonnes. At a total height of 170 metres, the
Haliade is almost twice as tall as the Statue of Liberty. Its blade, which measures 150 metres in diameter, is comparable to twice
the wingspan of an airbus. Its outsized blades cover a surface area of 17,860 m2, three times the area of a football
field.
GE Renewable Energy
GE Renewable Energy is a 9 billion dollar “start-up” within GE and brings together one of the broadest and deepest portfolios in
the renewable energy industry. Whether it is with onshore wind, offshore wind, hydro or new energies such as solar or Tidal, GE
Renewable Energy works every day to make the world work better and cleaner. Today, the company has the largest renewable energy
installed base with 370 GW and is present is more than 40 countries. Its 13,000 employees are proud to help the world understand
that nobody should choose between affordable, reliable and sustainable energy. Backed-up by the world’s first digital industrial
company, GE Renewable Energy’s existence is ruled by the will to change the future of energy.
www.ge.com
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GE Renewable Energy
Tim Brown, +1-302-509-9352
timothy.s.brown@ge.com
or
Cecile Dodat, +33 1 85 32 29 42
cecile.dodat@ge.com
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