China races on with wind turbine technology — Exporter Magazine
China’s Sinovel Wind Group Co Ltd has produced a 6mW wind turbine prototype, fresh off the production line which can be used in onshore, offshore and inter-tidal wind farms, according a Xinhua News report found on ChinaDaily.com.
The report quoted Tao Gang, vice-president of Sinovel Wind Group Co Ltd, saying the production of huge turbines will accelerate the development of offshore wind power in china.
The wind turbine developed by Sinovel is the first of its kind produced in the country. Previously, Germany was the only country capable of independently developing the turbine — the largest in terms of capacity in the world — and is the only country to have tested the prototype in the natural environment.
With 128-meter blades in diameter, the prototype has greater wind capturing capacity and is more efficient at utilising wind resources than other turbines, said Tao.
Tao said indigenous production of the huge turbine will accelerate development of offshore wind power in the country.
Given the growing scarcity of land resources and emission reduction targets, European countries and the United States are pushing development of offshore wind power.
Over the next decade, Britain and France plan to install 7,600 offshore wind turbines — each unit with a capacity of more than 5mW.
China is also racing to tap offshore wind power. The first 100mW offshore wind farm went into operation in Shanghai in August 2010, with 34 Sinovel made 3mW turbines installed.
In the same year, China completed public tender for offshore wind farms totaling 1gW in capacity in the eastern Jiangsu Province. Construction of the wind farms will start this year.
Sinovel is looking to develop 10mW turbines, according to Tao.
Other Chinese wind turbine makers are also developing large capacity turbines. Xiangtan Electrical Machinery Co Ltd (XEMC), based in central Hunan Province, produced a 5mW prototype last October.
Before 2000, the domestic wind turbine market almost exclusively relied on equipment imported from Europe.
Shi Pengfei, vice president of China Wind Energy Commission (CWEA), says the introduction of wind power concession projects and preferential feed-in tariff policy for wind power has boosted localised production since 2000.
Chinese wind turbine makers have expanded output through licensed production or joint design with foreign partners. China has over 80 wind turbine makers.
The top three wind turbine markers in the country, Sinovel, Goldwind and Dongfang Electric, are among the top 10 makers in the world.
By the end of 2010, domestic cumulative wind installed capacity amounted to 44.7gW, the largest in the world, and accounted for 23% of the world total, according to the CWEA. – Source: ChinaDaily.com