China has
been playing an increasingly important role in helping Argentina modernize and
improve its energy mix via boosting clean energy development led by wind power.
Arauco Wind
Farm, showcase of the Sino-Argentinean wind power development endeavor, falls
under jurisdiction of northern Argentina's La Rioja province, home to 40% of
the South American country's olive-growing industry.
Located in
the Puerta de Arauco Valley, Arauco Wind Farm was built in 2012 with 12 wind
turbines capable of generating 25 megawatts of power, along with a transformer
station. The wind farm was added with an extra installed capacity of 25
megawatts in 2013.
In March,
La Rioja and Chinese company Hydrochina International Engineering signed a deal
worth of more than US$300 million to raise Arauco Wind Farm's installed
capacity by 104 more megawatts.
La Rioja
"has as a strategic objective to move forward in what we are good at,
'energy sovereignty', to supply our citizens with the energy they need,"
said Javier Tineo, the regional official in charge of Economic Production and
Development, in an interview with Xinhua.
Tineo said
they hoped the wind farm would be able to generate more electricity to pump
water and expand irrigated area in the agriculturally important province on
completion of the expansion program with the help of the Chinese company.
By
increasing output at the wind farm, "we will make the province
self-sufficient and give the surplus to the national power grid," said
Tineo. He added that Chinese company's contribution is the key to the next
stage of development at the wind farm.
"The province's
government began looking for financial and technological partners. We met with
one of the most important Chinese companies (Hydrochina) and came to an
agreement," recalled Tineo, who praised Yang Wanming, Chinese ambassador
to Argentina, for his role in helping make the cooperation program a reality,
saying the wind farm "involves friendship and cooperation from both the
Chinese and Argentinean governments." According to Tineo, there is
"high expectation" in Argentina that increased trade and cooperation
with China will "contribute to our food production, our job creation, our
conditions for producing both wind and solar energy."
"We
expect to make progress with Chinese companies and the Chinese government,
because we need their expertise, industry and development in the (energy)
field, and their ability to develop machinery and equipment to improve our
primary productivity and food industry," said Tineo, the local official
from La Rioja.
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