Renewables

Parts for biggest wind turbine arrive at NSW port, headed for Bango project

Published by

The first shipment of super-sized General Electric wind turbine components destined for the 224MW Bango wind farm, which is in the early stages of construction in the New South Wales Southern Tablelands, have arrived at Port Kembla.

NSW Ports said the wind turbine components had arrived this week, the first of many to be imported through Port Kembla over the next six months for the 46-turbine project.

Bango is being developed by Australian outfit CWP Renewables around 30km north of Yass. The project was last year reported to be the first in the world to use General Electric’s Cypress 5.3MW turbines, which rank amongst the largest onshore wind turbines currently in production, and is believed to be the biggest to be installed so far in Australia.

As you can see in the graphic below, the turbines will have a hub height of 121 metres, and a blade length of 79 metres, meaning the maximum height of the turbines will reach 200 metres.

For CWP Renewables, the wind farm is the third for the company in NSW, in partnership with global investment management firm Partners Group, including the completed 270MW Sapphire Wind Farm and the under-construction 135MW Crudine Ridge wind farm.

CWP is also leading the huge Asia Renewable Energy Hub consortium in the Pilbara region of W.A. which is looking at building 15GW of wind and solar capacity to support local industry and to export to Asia either as “green hydrogen” or possibly through a sub-sea cable.

NSW Ports said the Bango wind turbine components would be stored on berth at the AAT facility before being transported by truck to the project site, ready for assembly.

Image Source: Infrastructure Magazine
Image Source: Infrastructure Magazine

“We are proud to work with our partners in the supply chain to support these important renewable energy projects for our state,” said NSW Ports CEO Marika Calfas in a statement.

“With the addition of the Bango wind turbines, Port Kembla will have helped facilitate the import of 274 wind turbines for nine wind farms in NSW.

“This important trade is only possible because of the work of stevedores and specialist heavy haul logistics providers, who have the complex task of discharging the oversized cargo from the vessel and transporting them to the wind farms across regional New South Wales,” Calfas said.

The Bango wind farm Facebook page said the wind turbine parts would be following the below route, and would be travelling mostly in the morning, and returning unloaded from midday onwards – before or after school buses were on the road.

TURBINE COMPONENT DELIVERIES TO BANGO WIND FARM

Wind turbine components will soon be arriving to the Bango Wind Farm on…

Posted by Bango Wind Farm on Sunday, July 19, 2020

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . 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

Australian green hydrogen startup signs deal to deliver its first large-scale electrolyser

An Australian startup promising to transform the economics of green hydrogen has celebrated its fifth…

4 July 2026

Zen Energy put into administration just days after regulatory approvals for sale and transfer

One of the leading lights of a new breed of renewable-energy based utilities placed into…

4 July 2026

Solar Sharer free power offer is being undermined by higher network charges and complex tariffs

Some households will use batteries, EV charging and behaviour change to make very good use…

3 July 2026

China battery giant launches major new push for “circularity” amid EV and home storage boom

China battery giant launches two major initiatives aimed at improving the sustainability of battery manufacturing,…

3 July 2026

Community battery rollout is way behind schedule, with only a quarter built on time

A report into the progress of the federal government's Arena-backed community battery rollout has revealed…

3 July 2026

One of Australia’s first solar and battery hybrid projects reaches financial close, confirming big shift in market

One of Australia's first solar and battery hybrid projects reaches financial close, confirming big shift…

3 July 2026