Jakarta Globe – AFP, May 07, 2014
Tarfaya. Africa’s largest wind farm, at Tarfaya in southwestern Morocco, has started generating electricity and will be capable of meeting the electricity needs of several hundred thousand people, officials say.
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Wind turbines at the Tarfaya wind farm in southwestern Morocco on May 14, 2013. (AFP Photo/Fadel Senna) |
Tarfaya. Africa’s largest wind farm, at Tarfaya in southwestern Morocco, has started generating electricity and will be capable of meeting the electricity needs of several hundred thousand people, officials say.
Installed
on 10,000 hectares along the wind-blown southern Atlantic coast, the 80-meter
high turbines, 131 in all, will be fully operational in October and produce up
to 300 megawatts of electricity.
The North
African kingdom has no hydrocarbon reserves of its own and hopes to cover 42 percent
of its energy needs with renewable sources by 2020. It has launched a plan to
produce 4,000 megawatts from wind and solar power.
Last year,
Morocco officially launched the construction of a 160-megawatt solar power
plant near the desert city of Ouarzazate, which is slated for completion next
year.
Work
started in Tarfaya at the beginning of 2013, and 88 of the 131 turbines have
now been erected, according to Mohammed Sebti. Moroccan firm Nareva Holding is
carrying out the project in partnership with France’s GDF Suez.
Forty-four
turbines have been connected to the grid, with the first kilowatts delivered
earlier this month, Sebti told an AFP journalist at the site.
Production
will continue to rise, with its “full commissioning to be completed in October
as planned,” he added.
Costing
around $690 million, the wind farm will be the continent’s biggest, surpassing
Ethiopia’s Ashegoda project, with its 84 turbines and 120-megawatt capacity.
It will
save 900,000 tons of CO2 a year, according to GDF.
Around 50
employees, of the 700 people involved in the construction phase, will continue
working at the site once it is fully operational.
The
southwest is the focus of Morocco’s wind plans, with the smaller Akhfennir
plant, around 100 kilometres to the east of Tarfaya, already producing 100 MW
from 60 turbines.
The Tarfaya
region lies on the edge of Western Sahara, a disputed territory larger than the
United Kingdom, most of which is under Moroccan control, but with the
Algeria-based Polisario Front campaigning for independence since 1973.
A 50 MW
wind farm already exists at Foum el Oued, near Western Sahara’s main city of
Laayoune, and other projects are planned, according to Morocco’s Economic,
Social and Environmental Council.
But
attracting foreign firms to participate in the kingdom’s wind plans for the
territory will be harder than in Morocco itself.
Agence France-Presse
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