Bajgora Wind Farm
A few of the 27 wind turbines
Official nameParku i Erës Bajgora
CountryKosovo
LocationBajgorë, Mitrovica
Coordinates42°58′14″N 21°0′53″E / 42.97056°N 21.01472°E / 42.97056; 21.01472
StatusOperational
Construction costEUR 157 million
Wind farm
TypeOnshore
Hub height110 m
Rotor diameter137 m
Power generation
Units operational27 x 3.8 MW
Make and modelGeneral Electric Energy 3.8-137
Nameplate capacity102.6 MW
Annual net output320 GWh
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

The Bajgora Wind Farm (Albanian: Parku i Erës Bajgora) is the largest wind farm in Kosovo. It has a nameplate capacity of 102.6 MW and it is estimated to have a total annual output of 320 GWh, while the system is designed to be operated for at least 25 years.[1]

Overview

The Bajgora wind farm consist of 27 wind turbines of type GE 3.8 - 137, each one having 3.8 kW nameplate capacity. The hub height is 110 meters and the rotor diameter is 137 meters.[1] Each of the turbines has three blades with a diameter of 19.8 meters that are attached to the turbine rotor that converts the movement into energy.[2] It first started to feed electricity into the grid with nine generators in November 2021. Also, a 120 MW substation was built to transform the wind farm's electricity to the 110 kV level.[3]

Location

The Bajgora Wind Farm is located about 40 kilometers north of Prishtina in the southern foothills of the Kopaonik Mountains, and it is in an altitude of 1800 m. It accounts for a tenth of the domestic installed capacity in Kosovo.[3]

Pictures of the Bajgora Wind Farm

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Todorović, Igor (2021-09-03). "First part of Bajgora wind power plant starts trial operation". Balkan Green Energy News. Retrieved 2023-06-03.
  2. "Energy from the wind in Bajgora - K2.0". Kosovo 2.0. 2023-04-18. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
  3. 1 2 "102.6 MW Windfarm in Kosovo Begins Feeding the Grid - Largest Direct Investment Since Country's Founding". NOTUS energy. 2021-10-20. Retrieved 2023-06-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.