Te Uku Wind Farm

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Te Uku Wind Farm
File:Te Uku Wind Farm (2).jpg
The wind farm in June 2012
Te Uku Wind Farm is located in New Zealand
Te Uku Wind Farm
Location of Te Uku Wind Farm in New Zealand
Country New Zealand
Location Te Uku, near Raglan
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Status Operational
Construction began October 2010 (October 2010)
Commission date 19 November 2011 (19 November 2011)
Construction cost $230m
Owner(s) Meridian Energy and New Zealand
Wind farm
Type Onshore
Avg. site elevation 500m
Site area 200 hectares (2.0 km2)
Hub height 80 m (262 ft)
Rotor diameter 101 m (331 ft)
Rated wind speed 14–90 km/h (9–56 mph)
Power generation
Units operational 28
Make and model Siemens: SWT-2.3-101[1]
Nameplate capacity 64 MW
Website
https://www.meridianenergy.co.nz/about-us/te-uku/
File:A 10.9 tonne 49m long Siemens turbine blade for Te Uku windfarm waits at the summit of SH23 before heading towards Raglan.jpg
A 10.9 tonne 49m long Siemens turbine blade for Te Uku windfarm waits at the summit of SH23 for its scheduled time to close the road in November 2010.

Te Uku Wind Farm is a wind farm at Te Uku near Raglan, New Zealand. It has a capacity of 64MW[2][3] using 28 wind turbines. Construction was completed in March 2011,[4] at a cost of $200 million.[5] The farm covers an area of approximately 200 hectares (2.0 km2).[6] The wind farm is jointly owned by WEL Networks and Meridian Energy.[7]

Resource consent was granted in May 2008[8] and appeals were resolved by November 2008. Construction of the wind farm began in 2010.[9] Hick Bros Civil and Spartan Construction won an award for outstanding technical and environmental planning.[10] The wind farm was officially opened by the Prime Minister in February 2011.[11] Te Uku was fully operational on 10 March 2011.[12]

Te Uku Windfarm is controlled from Twizel.[13]Twizel control centre was set up for the Waitaki power scheme.

The windfarm is linked to the national grid's Te Kowhai substation by about 17 km (11 mi) of 33kv lines on 159[14] steel poles built on concrete pile foundations[15] and an underground cable from just west of Waitetuna Valley Rd to Cogswell Rd,[16] a total of about 25 km (16 mi).[17]

Construction

File:A 54 tonne 27m long Korean built segment of a Te Uku windfarm tower descends SH23 towards Raglan.jpg
A 54 tonne 27m long Korean built tower segment descends SH23 on its journey from Ports of Auckland in November 2010.

Each 130.5 m. high, 318 tonne, turbine took 2 or 3 days to build using 4 cranes, the largest a 600 tonne KR Wind/NZ Crane Group Alliance crane. Towers were formed in 3 sections (made in Korea), and topped by Siemens components (as at Makara) - a 3.5 m circumference, 81 tonne nacelle, hub and 3 turbine blades. Barge transport was considered, but rejected in favour of road transporters running from September 2010 to January 2011.[18]

Pipiwharauroa Way

File:Pipiwharauroa Way approaching the Pakihi Stream crossing..JPG
The part-formed cutting through Okete Volcanics rock has been widened twice since 2003.
File:Beyond Pipiwharauroa Way on the Vandy Rd side of the summit the part formed Plateau Rd drops through a rock cutting about 300 metres long, 3 metres wide and up to 3 metres deep..JPG
On the Vandy Rd side of the summit the part-formed Plateau Rd drops through a rock cutting about 300 metres long, 3 metres wide and up to 3 metres deep. In the 1940s it is said a car managed to follow this road, though it is now very difficult to get a mountain bike along it.

One of the mitigation measures was this walking and cycling track. The track climbs from a car park on Kawhia Rd, near Bridal Veil, runs about 6 km and climbs 280m to the windfarm on Wharauroa Plateau. Over 2 km of less interesting walking can be saved if the walk is started from the gate at the end of the driveable part of Plateau Rd. From this point Lake Disappear can be seen to the south after wet weather. There is no marked end to the track. It just peters out into the partly formed paper road (see the dashed line on the 1:50,000 map just north of the Pakihi Stream). It follows an ancient Maori track which was often used by warriors on raids between Waikato and Kawhia.[19]

The road access to the windfarm largely followed the paper road, which was started around 1900 (a local historian wrote that a store ledger started at Te Mata in 1896 includes at least 11 workers on the road[20]) and seemingly abandoned a few years later, though Bob Vernon also wrote, "about 1919 the Public Works Department cut a six-foot track through solid bush, from the south-eastern end of the plateau [where it joins this paper road] to the head of the Makomako valley".[21]

In 2013 there was controversy between a local farmer and Waikato District Council about whether Pipiwharauroa Way could be closed for the lambing season.[22]

Microwave tower

File:Te Uku microwave tower.jpg
microwave tower beside trig point in 2009

From the mid 1950s a microwave tower has been on the crest of the hill overlooking Te Uku.[23] It is now also part of a smart metering network.[24] There is also a VHF repeater near the tower.[25]

See also

File:Te Uku windfarm turbine and microwave tower.JPG
The 1950s microwave tower is dwarfed by the 130m high turbine

References

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External links

  1. http://www.siemens.com/press/en/pressrelease/press=/en/pressrelease/2009/renewable_energy/ere200911019.htm
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  13. Raglan Chronicle 26 November 2010 page 3
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  19. page 76 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  20. Te Mata - Te Hutewai the Early Days R. T. VERNON 1972 A. O. RICE LIMITED
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  23. Te Uku microwave mast on 1:50,000 map
  24. Aprisa XE and Aprisa SR empower robust, reliable, digital multi-service network
  25. Raglan23: Te-Uku part of new amateur radio network December 17, 2014
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