14 December 2011
The approval of resource consent for a wind farm in
The responsible plans for development of the wind farm with conservation benefits by local electricity lines company MainPower have also been supported by Mr Pyle. “The
“The
The proposed
“It is too early to say when construction might go ahead, but MainPower can now look closely at their plans and review the best choice of current models to generate cost effective electricity,” says Eric Pyle. “We welcome the addition of
ENDS
For further information please contact:
Nigel Parry, Communications Manager
Tel: 04 499 5047 / 027 212 2296
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Andrew Hurley, Generation Manager MainPower, on 03 311 8329
Background notes:
Resource consent allows MainPower to choose the final wind turbines to be used, allowing for 26 to 67 turbines depending on the size chosen. The electricity lines company applied to Hurunui District Council for resource consent in 2007 and the decision was subsequently appealed to the Environment Court MainPower significantly redesigned the proposal through a process of
There will be a net gain in biodiversity if the project goes ahead. As part of the project, MainPower will protect 127 Hectares of predominantly native shrubland and forest in a limestone based ecosystem. The
The plan for the
- 67 turbines of 500kW capacity each, total capacity 33.5MW
- 40 turbines 1MW capacity each, total capacity 40MW
- 26 turbines 3MW capacity each, total capacity 78MW
Wind generated electricity is now very cost effective and costs are continuing to improve. Wind generated electricity also tends to reduce electricity prices in New Zealand as it operates without subsidy and with low operating costs displaces more expensive electricity from the wholesale market.
The wind farm would link in to the electricity network near Waipara.
The consent has a time limit of 8 years, within which construction must be started. Before construction can commence, MainPower will monitor hydrology and bird populations for 2 years.
Wind farms already generate over 4% of