Wind energy

Construction begins at massive NSW wind farm, to feature Australia’s largest turbines

Published by

Construction has begun on Tilt Renewables’ massive Rye Park wind farm in New South Wales, the biggest wind project in the state to date, using what will be the biggest wind turbines in Australia.

Tilt announced on LinkedIn this month that construction had started on the 396MW project, near Yass in the NSW Southern Tablelands, which would feature 66 Vestas turbines rated at 6MW each. That beats the 5.6MW turbines which are being installed at Kaban in north Queensland.

“What a great way to round out the year!” the post said.

Tilt said the wind farm would create an estimated 250 direct jobs during the construction phase and up to 10 ongoing regional jobs during its operational life, with opportunities for local workers throughout.

In a newsletter update last week, the developer said its construction contractor Zenviron and its subcontractors were busy mobilising staff and equipment at the site, and had commenced construction of three site entry points.

Rye Park makes up part of Tilt’s Australian pipeline of projects and assets that attracted a $2.6 billion offer from PowAR, a joint venture between AGL, QIC and the Future Fund, that took ownership of Tilt in August.

It will be the largest operating wind farm in NSW when fully commissioned in 2024, and one of the five biggest in the country.

More than half of the production from the Rye Park wind project (55 per cent) has been contracted to mining company Newcrest Mining under a 15-year power purchase agreement that will supply the Cadia gold mine in NSW, and help Newcrest reduce its own corporate emissions.

The Rye Park project is expected to produce an average of 1,188GWh a year, equivalent to the annual electricity needs of about 215,000 homes, and will offset 960,000 tonnes of CO2 per year. Zenviron and Lumea will work on the project construction and connections.

See RenewEconomy’s Large Scale Wind Farm Map of Australia for more information.


Good, independent journalism takes time and money. But small independent media sites like RenewEconomy have been excluded from the millions of dollars being handed out to big media companies from the social media giants. To enable us to continue to hold governments and big business to account on climate and the renewable energy transition, and to help us highlight the extraordinary developments in technology and projects that are taking place, you can make a voluntary donation here to help ensure we can continue to offer the service free of charge and to as wide an audience as possible. Thank you for your support.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of One Step Off The Grid and deputy editor of its sister site, Renew Economy. She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Gravity storage pioneer lands another big battery contract in Australia

Victoria government's SEC chooses company best known for gravity storage technology to build conventional battery…

14 February 2025

“War on woke banks:” Macquarie joins mass exit from net zero alliance. Will Australia’s Big Four follow suit?

Two of the five Australian banks remaining in the Net Zero Bank Alliance are sending…

13 February 2025

No coal, gas or nuclear: Greens cut deals to “Dutton-proof” Labor’s flagship renewable policies

Greens get busy "Dutton-proofing" federal Labor's flagship clean energy policies to stop them being tweaked…

13 February 2025

NSW strikes land deal for massive new wind and battery storage project in south-west

NSW agrees deal for crown land to be used for massive wind and battery storage…

13 February 2025

Floating solar tech that harvests clean power and water heads to Australia under new deal

Companies join forces to bring cutting edge floating solar technology to the Australian market, to…

13 February 2025

NT strips funding from green groups, boosts fossil fuels, in foretaste of Dutton administration

A sign of what's to come? Northern Territory government moves to strip environmental groups of…

13 February 2025