Manjil and Rudbar Wind Farm

Manjil, Harzvil, Siahpoush and Rudbar Wind Farms are wind farms located in Gilan, Iran. In 1995 the Iranian governors decided to use renewable energies in Iran and started to develop wind farms in Manjil area. They start with installing a Nord Tank NTK-500/37 wind turbine. They added other products of Nordtank such as NTK-300/35 and NTK-550/42. The developer was Iran Renewable energies organization (SUNA) as representative of TAVANIR, and they chose Saba-Niroo as Iranian manufacturer to produce wind turbines in Iran. Saba-Niroo signed a joint venture agreement with Vestas to produce V47-660/45 in Iran. Moshanir power engineering consultants were the consultants of the project. Finally, the project finished in February 2015. Due to the privatization policy, TAVANIR established Manjil green power Generation company (www.sabzniroo.ir) and transferred all of his ownership on the mentioned power plant to this company. The company transferred to Omid Taban Hour Energy Management company on February 22, 2018. The total installed wind turbines in this project are as below:

  • Roudbar wind farm 4 units WTG with total capacity 2.15 MW
  • Harzevil wind farm 25 units WTG with total capacity 13.5 MW
  • Manjil wind farm 52 units WTG with total capacity 28.37 MW
  • Siahpoosh wind farm 69 units WTG with total capacity 48.18 MW
Manjil and Rudbar Wind Farm
A view of Manjil wind farm
CountryIran
LocationGilan
Coordinates36°44′04″N 49°23′39″E
StatusOperational
Commission date2009
Wind farm
TypeOnshore
Rated wind speed8.5m/s
Site elevation300m
Power generation
Units operational171
Make and modelNEG Micon
Vestas
Machine Sazi Arak (manufacturer)
Nameplate capacity87.34 MW
Capacity factor0.45
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

These farms include 150 units with total capacity of 92.2 MW.[1]

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-03-10. Retrieved 2010-04-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.