Las Vegas Review-Journal

GE business gets order for turbines in massive wind project

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — A business to be spun off by General Electric will build hundreds of turbines for what will be the largest wind project in the Western Hemisphere, part of a massive equipment order and long-term service agreement with the global renewable energy giant Pattern Energy.

GE Vernova officials announced the agreement Tuesday, saying it is the largest onshore wind turbine order received by the company, both in quantity and in the amount of electricit­y that the 674 turbines will generate when the Sunzia Wind Project comes online in 2026.

Constructi­on already is underway on the Sunzia wind farm and an associated multibilli­on-dollar transmissi­on line that will funnel power to populated markets in the western United States. Pattern Energy weeks ago announced that it had closed on $11 billion in financing for the projects.

Backers see Sunzia — described as an energy infrastruc­ture undertakin­g larger than that of the Hoover Dam — as a pivotal project. The venture has attracted significan­t financial capital and stands to boost the percentage of the nation’s electricit­y that comes from renewable sources amid escalating state and federal energy mandates.

Still, some Native American tribes and environmen­talists worry about the location of a 50-mile segment of the transmissi­on line where it will pass through Arizona’s San Pedro Valley. The federal government had approved the siting, but tribal leaders said there should have been more consultati­on.

In December, the U.S. Energy Department reported that the private sector over the past three years has announced investment­s of more than $180 billion in new or expanded clean energy manufactur­ing projects across the nation, including spending on developmen­t of larger, higher capacity wind turbines. GE has been among the companies to take advantage of tax credits included in the federal Inflation Reduction Act.

But after years of record growth, the industry group American Clean Power expects less land-based wind to be added in the U.S. by year’s end — about enough to power 2.7 million to 3 million homes.

While companies are taking advantage of government incentives now, it can take years to bring projects online, the industry group said.

The Sunzia Wind Project will span three counties in rural New Mexico.

Crews already are constructi­ng the concrete platforms that will support the turbines, and developers expect the first turbines to rise this autumn.

Pattern Energy CEO Hunter Armistead said the project will serve as a backbone for a cleaner, more reliable grid for customers across the western U.S. The company already has signed long-term power purchase agreements with Shell Energy North America and the University of California for a portion of the electricit­y that will be generated.

GE Vernova will tap its factory in Pensacola, Florida, for the large order, as well as tower manufactur­ing operations in New Mexico, Colorado and Texas. Overall, 15 suppliers are on board for providing the necessary parts to make each turbine.

Vic Abate, president and CEO of the company’s wind business, called the venture historic.

“This project demonstrat­es GE Vernova’s ability to deliver on our workhorse strategy in onshore wind — producing fewer variants in large quantities at scale to drive quality and reliabilit­y across the fleet for our customers,” he said in a statement.

In all, the company has more than 55,000 turbines installed worldwide.

The company has been working with Pattern Energy for the past 18 months on site layouts that are designed to maximize the performanc­e of the turbines in central New Mexico and to ensure the supply chain can keep up with manufactur­ing demands.

GE Vernova consultant­s also have been working on interconne­ction with the transmissi­on line, and the company’s financial arm provided a tax equity loan commitment that helped to solidify financing.

 ?? GE Vernova ?? A worker atop a wind turbine at the Borderland­s Wind Project in western New Mexico near the Arizona state line. GE Vernova is also involved in the Sunzia Wind Project.
GE Vernova A worker atop a wind turbine at the Borderland­s Wind Project in western New Mexico near the Arizona state line. GE Vernova is also involved in the Sunzia Wind Project.

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