| Pen y Cymoedd Wind Farm | |
|---|---|
| Country | Wales |
| Location | betweenNeath andAberdare in south Wales. |
| Coordinates | 51°42′40″N3°33′43″W / 51.711°N 3.562°W /51.711; -3.562 |
| Status | Operational |
| Commission date |
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| Owner | |
| Operator | |
| Wind farm | |
| Hub height | 89.5 m[1] |
| Rotor diameter |
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| Power generation | |
| Units operational | 76 × 3 MW |
| Make and model | Siemens Gamesa SWT-3.0-108 (28) Siemens Gamesa SWT-3.0-113 (48) |
| Nameplate capacity |
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| Capacity factor | 30%[2] |
| Annual net output | 0.6 TWh |
| External links | |
| Website | group |
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Pen y Cymoedd ("Head of the Valleys") is awind farm located betweenNeath andAberdare insouth Wales. It opened in 2017.
Natural Resources Wales signed a lease agreement withVattenfall ofSweden and its British-based subsidiaryVattenfall United Kingdom (formerly Nuon Renewables), to develop what will be theUnited Kingdom's highest altitude wind farm, on a site owned by Natural Resources Wales, previously theForestry Commission Wales.[3] The project has seen the installation of 76 turbines with a peak power of 228 MWp, that are planned to operate for 25 years, and to generate up to 0.6 TWh/yr, an amount enough to power up to 140 000 homes with an annual consumption of 4 266 kWh.[4] The turbine manufacturer isSiemens Wind Power.
During the planning process, Vattenfall (at that time: Nuon) agreed to contribute about £1.85m annually to a community fund and to invest £3m in a habitat restoration scheme, and the following parties contributed to the debate:[5]
The project gained final planning permission in May 2012.[6]
The first turbine was fully completed in April 2016[7] and began generating electricity in autumn 2016. The final (76th) turbine was installed on 2 March 2017, and the farm has been fully operational since 7 May 2017.[8] The farm was officially opened in September 2017.[9]