Vattenfall |
Pen y Cymoedd Wind Farm Project, Upper Rhondda, Wynon and Afan Valleys, Wales |
Project Facts and Figures
Project Value | £400 Million |
Project Duration | 38 Months |
Services | Electrical Infrastructures Services including cabling Installation |
Market Sector | Renewable Energy, Wind Farm |
Number of Turbines | 76 |
Wind Turbine Capacity | 3 MW |
Total Installed Capacity | 228 MW |
Grid Connection Voltage | 132 kV |
Size of Site | 4,683ha |
Energy for | 140,000 households |
Length of Online Access Tracks | 85 km |
Length of Onsite 33kV Cabling | 450 km |
Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW wind farm scope of work and major design considerations:
In 2015 Natural Resources Wales (a Welsh Government sponsored body), signed a lease agreement with Vattenfall of Sweden. And its British-based subsidiary Vattenfall United Kingdom (formerly Nuon Renewables).
At the time, this was to develop what would be the UK’s highest altitude wind farm, on a site owned by Natural Resources Wales, previously the Forestry Commission Wales.
The project:
The project saw the installation of 76 wind turbines with a peak power of 228 MW and planned to operate for 25 years. This was to generate up to 0.6 TWh/yr, an amount enough to power up to 140, 000 homes, with an annual consumption of 4266 kWh. The turbine manufacturer is Siemens Wind Power. During the planning process, Vattenfall (at that time: Nuon) agreed to contribute about £1.85m annually to a community fund. As well as to invest £3m in a habitat restoration scheme.
*This figure is based on site specific data using the following calculation. Maximum installed capacity of the Wind Farm (228 MW), multiplied by the number of hours in a year (8766), multiplied by the output capacity of the wind farm as a percentage (30%) [Renewable UK] divided by the amount of energy used by each UK home on average per year (4,266 kWh) [DECC].
Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW wind farm project timings:
The project gained final planning permission in May 2012. The first turbine was fully completed in April 2016 and began generating electricity in autumn 2016. The final 76th turbine was installed on 2 March 2017. The wind farm has been fully operational since 7 May 2017. The wind farm was officially opened in September 2017.
The Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW wind farm generation site:
The generation site consists of 76 Siemens SWP 3.0 direct drive wind turbines. The wind farm, with a total capacity of 228 megawatts (MW) exports at 33 kV which feeds into the Pen y Cymoedd Sub-Station, where it is stepped up from 33 kV to 132 kV. A second sub-station some 9.2 km away in Rhigos steps up the voltage from 132 kV to 400 kV to feed into a 400 kV National Grid substation.
The turbines are arranged in 11 Arrays of varying quantities of turbines over four regions of the site. The final region being completed and handed over operationally on 1st June 2017.
What the client wanted:
Vattenfall is a European energy company with approximately 20,000 employees. For more than 100 years they have electrified industries, supplied energy to people’s homes and modernised their way of living through innovation and cooperation.
Their goal is clear: they want to make fossil-free living possible within one generation. Climate change is a global challenge and therefore requires broader solutions. Vattenfall is one of the leading companies in renewable energy production.
They help their customers to be more energy efficient, and adopt smarter technologies to create their own electricity or heating and switch to cleaner alternatives that are affordable and easy to use.
Climate smart solutions:
Vattenfall has taken one more step towards supplying climate-smart solutions with the launch of their largest onshore wind farm at Pen y Cymoedd. And by co-locating renewable energy production with associated storage facilities. Vattenfall aims to promote the transition to a new energy system. The 22 MW system believed to be the largest co-located battery and wind farm project in Wales, provides a rapid-reaction grid reliability service to the National Grid. Known as Enhanced Frequency Response. The National Grid estimates enhanced frequency response contracts will save the consumer £200m over four years.
Producing and storing energy:
Inaugurated on September 28, 2017. The goal was to supply 188,000 households with renewable electricity from wind power. Pen y Cymoedd would also become the largest commercial wind farm in Wales with a co-located battery facility for storing electricity. At the inauguration, Vattenfall’s CEO Magnus Hall stressed the importance of producing and storing energy at the same site. They want to continue growing in the renewable sector to become fossil free within a generation. With Pen y Cymoedd, and the possibility to store energy. They continue to transform energy production and find new and innovative ways to help customers and partners to be climate smart.
Gunnar Groebler, heading Vattenfall´s Wind Business involving investments of EUR 5 billion over five years: “Pen y Cymoedd wind farm highlights a very important step for us. Successfully completing our largest onshore wind farm underlines that we are well on track with our ambitious goals in wind power. We are very proud, that Pen y Cymoedd will provide green energy to the equivalent of 15 percent of the households in Wales.
Now we are looking forward to equipping Pen y Cymoedd with additional battery storage capacity in order to support the grid integration of renewable energy we produce here in Wales.” In March, Vattenfall and the BMW Group signed an agreement for the supply of up to 1,000 lithium-ion batteries this year. The batteries, which have a capacity of 33 kilowatt hours (kWh) each, will be packaged and installed at Pen y Cymoedd in Q4 this year and deliver enhanced frequency response to National Grid hence help to integrate renewable energy to the energy system.
How Powersystems helped:
Powersystems involvement started with soil resistivity readings being taken at all of the 76-wind turbine base locations, long before the construction had gotten underway. From this data, the earthing studies were produced and the installation designs formalised.
- Powersystems designed and installed the 33 kV distribution from Pen y Cymoedd sub-station to the turbine cable terminations
- This involved some 312 km of 33 kV single-core power cables, which required 2 x fibre optic network cables and earthing cables all laid into trenches alongside access tracks. Followed by commissioning, energisation, SAP control and up to hand-over of all the 33 kV cabling from the Primary Sub-station to 76 turbines
- Requiring some 312 km of power cables
- 27 x 33 kV Sub-stations in high security GRP enclosures
- Full fibre optic network to all turbines
- 27 sub-stations
- 3 Met Masts, earthing (including necessary studies) on the completed site
- Testing and energisation of 900 terminations
- 33 kV terminations conducted in total
- 94 x 3ph in-line joints
- 194 x 3ph T connections
- 12 x 3ph Pfisterer connections
The results:
Environmental Benefit
- Remarkably all of the team’s accomplishments were achieved in a remote, inhospitable and environmentally sensitive landscape
- Sustainability and social impact was a key focus and over 65% of local labour was utilised from within 35 miles of the site, 92% within Wales
- Pen y Cymoedd boosts Wales’ drive to carbon reduction, it accelerates Vattenfalls’ shift to be fossil free in a generation and it helps the Welsh economy to grow
- Annual homes equivalent production* Approximately 140,000 (enough electricity to meet the annual domestic needs of both Rhondda Cynon Taf and Neath Port Talbot councils combined)
- Pen y Cymoedd Wind Energy Project was officially opened by the First Minister of Wales, Carwyn Jones and Vattenfall’s CEO, Magnus Hall in September 2017
- The project is the largest onshore wind farm in Wales and Vattenfall’s largest onshore wind farm
- The wind farm is situated on Welsh Government land. And managed by Natural Resources Wales, a key partner in the delivery of the project
Economic Benefit
- Jobs supported: 600+
- As part of the UK Wind Week 2020, Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW Wind Farm was featured by RenewableUK. Beyond the wind farm, more than 100 jobs have been supported by the project’s innovative community benefit scheme, which contributes £1.8 million each year to the local community.
- Of the £400m investment to build the Pen y Cymoedd Wind Energy Project, 52% went to businesses in Wales, securing work for more than 1,000 workers in Wales over the past three years
- A community fund of over £1.8m
- Vattenfall and their contractors have spent £220m in the Welsh economy since construction started in 2014. 52% of the total investment they have made in Pen y Cymoedd. That is quite an achievement and one they will want to repeat if they get the chance to build other wind farms in Wales
In Conclusion, Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW Wales’s largest onshore wind farm:
Pen y Cymoedd Wind Farm, is Wales’s largest onshore wind farm. Which started operating at full power, 38 months after construction in the upper Rhondda, Cynon and Afan valleys.
The 76-turbine Pen y Cymoedd 228 MW wind energy farm project is capable of meeting the electricity needs of more than 15% of households in Wales. It also boosts delivery of Wales’s climate change ambitions, preventing the release of in an average year more than 300,000 tonnes of CO2 from fossil fuelled generation.
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