Hydro to build largest wind farm in Canada

subscribe

Manitoba Hydro's board has accepted a proposal from Babcock & Brown Canada to build a 300-megawatt wind farm in south central Manitoba.

Greg Selinger, the provincial minister responsible for hydro, said the 130-turbine wind farm will be the largest wind generation project in Canada when it is completed.

The turbines will be installed in fields around St. Joseph, Man., located less than 20 km north of the U.S. border near Altona.

Construction is expected to begin next year, and the wind turbines are scheduled to start producing electricity in late 2010 or early 2011.

Manitoba Hydro CEO Bob Brennan said the Crown utility will buy the power from Babcock & Brown — at a rate yet to be established, as negotiations on a final power purchase agreement are still underway — then package the wind-generated electricity with more reliable hydro-generated power and sell it to "anybody that will buy it," including utilities in Saskatchewan, Ontario or the United States.

Manitoba Hydro had first tendered a request for proposals for a 300-megawatt wind project last year, and received more than 80 submissions. The company short-listed 10 potential projects earlier this year then selected the Babcock & Brown project in St. Joseph from that list.

The project is expected to see about $70 million paid to landowners in the area as compensation for allowing turbines to be installed.

The power purchase agreement is set to last 25 years.

Manitoba's other commercial wind farm is located near St. Leon and generates 99 megawatts of electricity.

Related News

Drax Power Station

How the dirtiest power station in western Europe switched to renewable energy

LONDON - A power station that used to be the biggest polluter in western Europe has made a near-complete switch to renewable energy.

The Drax Power Station in Yorkshire, England, used to spew out millions of tons of carbon dioxide a year by burning coal. But over the past eight years, it has overhauled its operations by converting four of its six coal-fired units to biomass. The plant's owners say it now generates 15% of the country's renewable power.

The change means that just 6% of the utility's power now comes from coal. The ultimate goal is to stop using coal altogether.

"We've…

READ MORE
power lines

European Power Hits Records as Plants Start to Buckle in Heat

READ MORE

powerlines

The German economy used to be the envy of the world. What happened?

READ MORE

geothermal power

Swiss Earthquake Service and ETH Zurich aim to make geothermal energy safer

READ MORE

canada solar future

'That can keep you up at night': Lessons for Canada from Europe's power crisis

READ MORE