GE achieves 1,500 wind power turbines installed in Canada
GE announced it has achieved its 1,500th installed wind turbine in Canada,
bringing GE’s total of installed wind capacity across Canada to 2 gigawatts
(GW)—or enough equivalent energy to power over 435,000 Canadian homes. GE is
celebrating this milestone with wind industry peers at this week’s CanWEA 2014
Wind Energy Conference & Exhibition in Montreal.
The landmark turbine is a GE 1.6-100 wind turbine for China Longyuan
Canada’s Dufferin wind farm. Dufferin is the wind developer’s first wind farm
in North America.
“Longyuan Canada is proud to be a part of this landmark for GE,” said
Jeff Hammond, Senior Vice President of Longyuan Canada Renewables Ltd. “The
Dufferin wind farm is the first wind farm developed by our company outside of
China, and we are grateful for GE’s assistance in making it a success.”
GE also installed its first Canadian 1.6-100 and 2.85-103 wind turbines
in 2014.
Since its first wind turbine installation in Canada in 2004 in Alberta,
GE’s wind presence has expanded to four provinces—Alberta, Nova Scotia, Ontario
and Quebec. GE’s installed base of wind turbines in Canada range from GE 1.5-77
to 2.85-103 wind turbines, with the most units installed in Ontario.
“GE is thrilled to reach this landmark in Canada,” said Anne McEntee,
president and chief executive officer of GE’s renewable energy business. “We
see it as a testament to the success of our customers in the country, and their
success in bringing renewable energy to Canadian citizens.”
According to the Canadian Wind Energy Association, wind energy supplies
nearly three percent of Canada’s electricity demand with over 8 GW of installed
wind capacity. CanWEA has set a goal to reach a target of producing 20 percent
or more of Canada’s energy with wind energy by 2025, and Canada ranked fifth
overall in global wind installations in 2013.
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