The joint venture of EDF EN Canada and Enbridge commissioned the Blackspring Ridge wind farm in Vulcan County, Alberta, Canada, in May 2014.
The 300MW onshore wind farm was developed at a cost of $600m, making it the biggest wind energy investment in the province.
The project generates in excess of 1TWh of clean energy a year, which is the equivalent of serving 140,000 Albertan homes. It created more than 350 construction jobs in the 12 months between May 2013 and May 2014, and 20 jobs for operations and maintenance.
EDF EN Canada, a subsidiary of EDF Energies Nouvelles, was responsible for construction management. Climate Change and Emissions Management Corporation, based in Alberta, commited $10m to support the project.
Blackspring Ridge wind project location
Greengate Power Corporation conceptualised the Blackspring Ridge wind project in 2008. The project was acquired by EDF EN Canada and Enbridge in April 2013.
Located 50km north of Lethbridge, the plant is spread over 19,424ha (48,000 acres) of private land in Vulcan County and consists of 166 Vestas V100 wind turbines.
The turbines, rated at 1.8MW each, have a rotor diameter of 100m and maximum blade length of 49m. The swept area of each turbine is 7,850m², while the hub height is 80m.
Blackspring Ridge wind farm construction details
The Blackspring Ridge wind project construction included building turbine foundations and access roads to each turbine, underground power collection system routes and project laydown yard, which acted as a main hub for the development of office trailers, material storage, deliveries, and an operations and maintenance building.
Power transmission and sale
The wind farm is expected to produce enough clean energy to power approximately 100,000 homes in Ontario annually.
A 240kV substation built 30km north of Lethbridge, Alberta, gathers clean electricity produced by the turbines. A 240kV switching station called Travers 554S, constructed by AltaLink, receives electricity from the substation via a 14km single-circuit transmission line and transmits it to an existing transmission line.
An 80m long, double-circuit 240kV transmission line was built between Travers 554S and the existing transmission line.
The project developers signed a 20-year purchase agreement with Pacific Gas and Electric for the sale of the renewable energy credits (RECs) generated at the project. The power is also sold to the Power Pool of Alberta on a fixed-price basis under mid and long-term contracts.
Contractors involved
Mortenson Construction was responsible for installing the turbine foundations, erecting turbines, and constructing underground power collection cables, access roads and the substation under a fixed-price engineering, procurement and construction contract.
Western Pacific was subcontracted by Mortenson for constructing the substation, while IDL Projects was subcontracted for civil and foundation works.
Vickars Construction was further subcontracted by IDL Projects to design and install the helical pile, while the helical pile material was procured from Ideal Foundation Systems.
The transmission line and switching station were built by AltaLink. Stantec provided environmental assessment services, public consultation and project management assistance.