With the introduction of a more powerful and versatile 2 MW Grid Streamer TM range, customers can deploy a modular fleet of efficient and fully grid compliant 2 MW turbines for optimal performance across all wind classes and site conditions, Senior Vice President for the 2 MW platform, Claus Stegmann Streh, said.
The gearvox and large rotors have been improved and the energy production benefits are substiantial. At a typical IEC I site (high wind), the new V90-2.0 MW Grid Streamer TM provides approximately 10 per cent more energy output than the V80-2.0 MW.
On an IEC II site (medium wind), the new V100-2.0 MW Grid Streamer TM produces up to 15 per cent more energy compared to a V90-1.8 MW.
Vestas has had over 7,800 of its 2 MW wind turbines installed worldwide since 1998. Using data from these as well as data from 43,000 other wind turbines, Vestas was able to make the changes needed to create this newest model.
The upgraded 2 MW platform is planned for global release and will initially be marketed in the North American, Northern European, and Mediterranean regions. Central Europe will follow later this year, Vestas announced. At the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) WINDPOWER 2011 conference in California last week, wind energy giant Vestas unveiled a new and improved design of its most popular wind turbine.
General Electric on Wednesday announced a new kind of power plant that can better handle the intermittent nature of renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power. The company calls the plant, the 510-megawattВ FlexEfficiency 50 Combined Cycle, the first of its kind. It can quickly ramp up and down in response to fluctuations from energy sources but still offer fuel efficiency at more than 61 percent, GE says.
The plant is the product of more than $500 million in research and development spending by the company. Traditionally, a power plant was either better at more flexibility or high efficiency, but not both. GE says it used internal expertise from its jet engine division to engineer a plant that can ramp up at a rate of more than 50 megawatts per minute, twice the rate of industry standards. GE says its engineers approached the plant’s design from an equipment and control systems perspective, combining a next-generation 9FB gas turbine that operates at 50 Hz (the power frequency used most around the world) with a 109D-14 steam turbine, which runs on the waste heat produced by the gas turbine; A W28 generator, Mark VIe integrated control system and heat recovery steam generator round out the package.
This kind of operational flexibility allows utilities to deliver power quickly when needed such as during a mid-summer air conditioning demand spike and ramp down when it is not, helping utility companies avoid keeping power plants at full blast when it not necessary, GE says.
That capability saves money and energy, and makes it easier to integrate renewable energy sources into the power grid. As our customers seek to increase their use of renewable energy, the challenge of grid stability sharpens, said Paul Browning, GE Power & Waters vice president for thermal products, in a statement.
They are under added pressure to achieve higher levels of efficiency and lower emissions for natural gas power plants. The FlexEfficiency moniker will be expanded into a portfolio of products under the companys Ecomagination campaign, GE says.
The move helps the company tailor its products to a coming natural gas boom while still supporting renewables adoption, particularly in European Union countries where regulations are strict.