Sandia, Kirtland Air Force Base Eye 30-MW Wind Farm
June 3, 2008
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New Mexico [RenewableEnergyWorld.com] Sandia National Laboratories and Kirtland Air Force Base may soon share a wind farm that will provide as much as one third of the electricity used by the two entities.
"This is a pioneering effort that meets the national initiative for renewable energy deployment. Plus it contributes to our self-sufficiency and sustainability. We are using a natural indigenous resource to meet our own needs. And it can be replicated elsewhere. It's a big deal."
-- Jose Zayas, Manager, Wind Energy Department, Sandia National Laboratories
The Labs' Wind Energy Technology Department and the U.S. Department of Energy Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program have embarked on a project to determine if such a plant is viable and to build a roughly 30-megawatt (MW) farm on the air base. A private company would design, build and operate the farm, and DOE/National Nuclear Security Administration, Sandia and Kirtland would buy the electricity. A Request For Information (RFI) was recently placed on a Sandia procurement website in an effort to make commercial, utility-scale wind farm developers, owners, operators, energy service companies and financiers aware of the potential opportunity to build a wind farm on the base. Deadline to respond to the RFI and be eligible to compete for the partnership is July 3. "Usually, private companies build wind farms to sell power to utilities or utilities install wind turbines for their own system use," Hill says. "Here we are looking for a private company to build a wind plant on federal land for federal [Sandia and Kirtland] consumption." Hill says that the Manzano mountain site is believed to be one of the best locations of all DOE facilities for a wind farm. Its wind yield is in an indicated class 5 or 6 on a scale of 1 to 7, falling just short of superb. Wind farms in New Mexico are located in Guadalupe County (Aragonne Mesa), Quay County (Caprock Wind Ranch, Phases I and II), Roosevelt County (San Juan Mesa) and Quay and DeBaca counties (New Mexico Wind Energy Center). Zayas says the idea of a Sandia/Kirtland wind farm "is as exciting as it gets" because it provides the opportunity to showcase Sandia and be one of the first DOE sites to have a utility-scale wind farm where power is being consumed. "This is a pioneering effort that meets the national initiative for renewable energy deployment," he says. "Plus it contributes to our self-sufficiency and sustainability. We are using a natural indigenous resource to meet our own needs. And it can be replicated elsewhere. It's a big deal."
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