Gamesa to supply 98 turbines for seven wind farms in Piau, Brazil

Gamesa to supply 98 turbines for seven wind farms in Piau, Brazil
- Contributed photo
0Comments

Brazil’s Gamesa received an order from Votorantim Energy to supply, transport, install and commission 98 G114-2.0 MW turbines at seven wind farms in Piau, a state in northeast Brazil, by the end of 2017.

The new turbine model has been widely accepted in Brazil, where 500 of the company’s G114-2.0 MW models currently are in operation across the country. The turbines are equipped with Gamesa’s MaxPower technology, which increases output from 196 MW to 205.8 MW and improves nominal capacity from 2.0 MW to 2.1 MW. The cutting-edge technology also helps the turbines produce more energy with a lower cost.

Gamesa also will be responsible for the maintenance of the seven wind farms through 2020.



Related

Jorge Antonio Jácome Pólit General Manager at Corporación Eléctrica del Ecuador

Central Eólica Villonaco resumes operations after scheduled maintenance is completed

Central Eólica Villonaco has resumed generating renewable energy after completing scheduled maintenance activities. The work focused on improving reliability and efficiency across various systems at the facility.

Juan Cuattromo, President at Banco de la Provincia de Buenos Aires

Treasury increases use of variable rate instruments amid uncertainty, Banco Provincia reports

Banco Provincia reports an increase in Treasury use of variable rate debt instruments due to market uncertainty and reduced demand for fixed rates. The analysis highlights concerns about financial sustainability given concentrated short-term maturities and limited foreign reserves.

Jorge Antonio Jácome Pólit General Manager at Corporación Eléctrica del Ecuador

CELEC announces measures to stabilize electricity supply in Esmeraldas after transformer failure

CELEC is taking steps to restore power in parts of Esmeraldas after a recent transformer failure disrupted service. Additional energy sources are being added while repairs continue on affected infrastructure. A new major transformer is expected online by late May.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Latin Business Daily.