Musselroe Wind Farm is a wind farm at Cape Portland, Tasmania, Australia.[1] It was the third wind farm built in the state, following the Bluff Point and Studland Bay Wind Farms (making up the larger Woolnorth Wind Farm).
While it is operated by Hydro Tasmania, which has a 25% stake in the farm, China-based Shenhua Clean Energy (SCE) owns a 75% stake in the farm. Guohua Energy Investment owns a 75% share in SCE, while its sister company, Shenhua Hong Kong, owning the remaining 25% share in SCE.[2]
The farm consists of 56 Vestas V90-3MW wind turbines, with a generating capacity of 168 MW. The energy output from the Musselroe Wind Farm will be sufficient to supply electricity to around 50,000 households and abate 450,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions annually.[3]
The first 37 turbines were connected to the grid in 2013,[4] and the full farm was completed in January 2014.[5]
Operations
The generation table uses eljmkt nemlog to obtain generation values for each month. Grid connection started in March 2013, and was fully commissioned during September 2013.
Musselroe Wind Farm Generation (MWh)
Year
Total
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2013
295,995
N/A
N/A
32*
241*
945*
7,468*
30,983*
48,784*
51,220*
68,997
35,500
51,825
2014
484,474
34,713
27,852
31,917
34,204
44,233
39,258
40,538
34,299
46,341
53,862
47,685
49,572
2015
510,368
45,190
29,885
53,417
24,113
48,269
45,136
52,411
43,939
25,602
36,782
56,514
49,110
2016
612,762
42,717
35,000
32,513
38,435
54,397
66,585
74,100
52,272
40,050
65,207
61,271
50,215
2017
552,314
58,317
45,091
35,292
23,034
37,767
42,745
47,559
47,323
69,999
51,901
32,724
60,562
2018
581,505
41,025
36,252
43,946
52,602
60,142
41,883
67,299
61,374
59,152
32,440
40,365
45,025
2019
654,555
50,717
53,246
41,241
49,790
55,566
40,342
74,391
59,072
55,465
50,408
70,404
53,913
2020
555,972
52,825
58,586
30,647
56,364
47,486
37,668
36,360
46,909
50,266
45,181
39,047
54,633
2021
567,380
49,594
34,507
50,766
57,488
47,518
30,729
50,829
62,706
59,434
52,991
31,725
39,093
Note: Asterisk indicates power output was limited during the month.
Note: From 2018, the wind farm participated in the FCAS market; this generally reduces the amount of power provided to the grid in order to allow a ramp up when required.[6] The wind farm now has an apparent limit of ≈153 MW, rarely returning to its previous maximum output of around ≈166 MW when the grid demands it.[7]