Titan Wind Project

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Titan Wind Project is 25MW wind farm which had a proposed expansion to 5,050 MW, formerly known as Rolling Thunder, based in South Dakota. The project developers, Clipper Windpower and BP Alternative Energy, expected to build Titan in several phases and, when completed, it would have been one of the largest wind farms in the world.[2][3][4][5]

CountryUnited States
Coordinates44°30′58″N 99°12′6″W
StatusPhase I operating
Quick facts Country, Location ...
Titan Wind Project
CountryUnited States
LocationHand County, South Dakota
Coordinates44°30′58″N 99°12′6″W
StatusPhase I operating
Commission datePhase I: 2009
OwnerBP Wind Energy[1]
Power generation
Units operational10 x 2.5 MW Liberty Wind Turbines
Nameplate capacityPhase I: 25 MW
Close

The complete wind farm would have used up to 2,020 of Clipper's Liberty 2.5 MW wind turbines.[2] However, this is no longer planned, as Clipper Windpower has since ceased production of wind turbines due to financial problems and the potential capacity is double local demand.[5]

Planned capacity

Operating at full planned capacity, the proposed expansion would be able to supply the electricity for 100% of the households in the state several times over. South Dakota's entire electricity consumption in 2005 was 9.811 TWh.[6] At an assumed capacity factor of 40% (roughly what is currently observed in South Dakota), a 5.05 GW nameplate capacity would correspond to an annual generation of 17.7 TWh.

Phase I

Construction of phase I began in 2009 on a 7,500-acre (3,000 ha) site in Hand County in the Ree Hills south of Ree Heights.[1] The project was complete by the end of the year.[7] Phase I consists of 10 Liberty C89 2.5 MW wind turbines for a combined nameplate capacity of 25 MW. Northwestern Energy has a long-term power purchase agreement.[1][7]

Battery storage pilot project

As of 2018, BP is planning to use the project as a pilot for battery storage with Tesla.[8]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI