Wind Energy

Published on May 18th, 2020 | by greentechheadlines

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GE Renewable Energy and Fina Enerji to build 193 MW wind farms in Turkey –

GE Renewable Energy and Fina Enerji to build 193 MW wind farms in Turkey –

Fina Enerji has selected GE Renewable Energy to supply 52 of its 3 MW platform onshore wind turbines for four wind farms in Turkey; Baglama, Tayakadin, Yalova and Pazarkoy.

With a total capacity of 193 MW, the wind farms will produce enough clean energy to power the equivalent 195,000 homes, save about 650,000 tons of CO2 and support Turkey’s renewable energy target. The scope also includes a 10-year servicing agreement.

GE Renewable Energy will produce the wind turbine blades in its LM Wind Power’s Bergama site, Izmir, Turkey. The towers will also be produced in the country.

Murat Özyeğin, Chairman of the Board of Fiba Group, the owner of Fina Enerji, said: “We are excited for our new wind farm projects that will increase our installed capacity from 350 MW to 543 MW. Baglama Project will be the easternmost wind farm investment in Turkey and we are particularly proud to contribute to the economic development in this region. We are pleased to sustain our partnership with GE and to contribute to our country’s renewable energy targets.”

Manar Al-Moneef, President & CEO, Onshore Wind, Middle East, North Africa & Turkey, said: “GE has been one of the early investors in Turkey and continues commitment to create jobs and contribute to the development of high technology in the energy industry. We are delighted to be partnering with Fina Enerji Holding again and working on these exciting projects featuring GE’s high-tech 3 MW platform turbines, well suited to Turkey’s wind speeds and landscape.”

GE already has an installed base of 1.2 GW of wind energy in Turkey and has built 500 wind turbines built in the country, including the 350 MW of onshore wind energy projects that Fina Enerji and GE Renewable Energy have built together.

Fina Enerji was established by Fina Holdings in 2007 and is involved in the development, generation, and trading of renewable energy.

This article was originally posted on Power Engineering International and was republished with permission.


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