Wind

GE unveils 6MW onshore wind turbine – its most powerful yet

Published by

Global engineering giant GE has unveiled its most powerful onshore wind turbine yet, a 6MW (6.0-164) version of its Cypress line of turbines, which promises to deliver an 11 per cent increase in annual energy production over the previously top-of-the-range 5.3MW model.

GE Renewable Energy announced the unveiling of the new turbine on Monday, which like its predecessors in the Cypress platform features a proprietary two-piece blade that is said to improve logistics and drive down costs of installation and maintenance.

Launched in 2017, GE’s Cypress onshore wind platform has grown from an initial rating of 4.8MW through to the latest 6MW – which the company says will start to be deployed in the field by 2022.

“The Cypress platform is already providing our customers the ability to lower the cost of onshore wind and gain added flexibility in siting turbines. This latest product in the platform will help them drive additional growth of clean, renewable wind power across Europe and beyond,” said the CEO of GE Onshore Wind Europe, Peter Wells.

In Australia, the 224MW Bango wind farm in the New South Wales Southern Tablelands was last year reported to be the first in the world to use General Electric’s Cypress 5.3MW turbines, which at that time ranked among the largest of their kind in production.

GE has also recently begun testing of its latest offshore wind turbine prototype, an optimised version of its Haliade-X design that can deliver a massive 13MW of output. As RenewEconomy reported here, the new Haliade-X is the largest turbine GE has ever produced, standing 248 metres tall, with 107 metre long blades.

GE’s new Cypress 6MW turbine won’t be the most powerful in the world, but it will be up there among them. Vestas is currently testing a prototype of its own V162-6.0MW in Denmark, while Germany’s Enercon has produced a 7.5MW turbine, which according to reports was a very specialised and site-specific product, and is no longer offered for sale.

GE says the Cypress onshore platform covers multiple wind classes enabling significant annual energy production improvements, increased efficiency in service ability, improved logistics and siting potential, and ultimately delivers more value for customers.

“The new model is designed with services in mind, facilitating up-tower repairs and featuring condition-based predictive services that will improve return-to-service and uptime, while lowering lifecycle costs,” the company said.

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

Total energy bills are more important than wholesale prices, even if you have rooftop solar

In another of these pieces I basically dislike writing, it's time to delve into the…

27 February 2025

Prices fall as first pumped hydro and two eight hour battery projects win landmark storage tender

First pumped hydro project win for a long duration storage tender in Australia, along with…

27 February 2025

“A tricky dance getting out of coal:” Why Australia’s biggest state and its biggest grid needs a climate bill

Perth’s state library theatre was packed out on Tuesday night last week to hear climate…

26 February 2025

Arena launches second round of federal Labor’s community battery grants

The Australian Renewable Energy Agency has put out a call for applications for a share…

26 February 2025

Botched wind turbine blade delivery takes out tree and street signs in rural town

Investigations are underway after a truck carrying a 70 metre wind turbine blade got stuck…

26 February 2025

Too slow and too expensive: House committee says Coalition nuclear plan won’t help climate targets

House committee says nuclear cannot be deployed quickly enough to help Australia's climate targets, or…

26 February 2025