Despite concerns that companies
battling to boast increasingly larger wind turbines may undermine efforts to
reduce and stabilise supply chain costs, wind turbine manufacturers are still
battling it out for the biggest and most powerful. Mingyang Smart Energy, one
of the world’s largest manufacturers of clean energy technologies for the wind,
solar, energy storage, and hydrogen industries, announced on its LinkedIn account late last week that it had successfully completed the
installation of its MySE18.X-20MW offshore wind turbine.
Located
on the island Chinese province of Hainan, the 20MW turbine was billed as “the
world’s largest single-capacity offshore wind turbine” and boasts a flexible
wind rotor diameter of between 260 to 292 metres.
Featuring a modular and lightweight
design, the MySE18.X-20MW turbine can generate 80GWh each year, offsetting
66,000 tons of CO₂ emissions – equivalent to the annual consumption of 96,000
residents
It is Mingyang’s second offshore wind milestone in just the
last few months, after the company completed construction of a twin-rotor floating wind turbine platform dubbed
OceanX, featuring two turbines on a V-shaped platform with a total capacity of
16.6GW
Mingyang described OceanX as “the
world’s largest single-capacity floating wind turbine platform”, claiming that the technology had been designed for
deep water applications and is capable of producing 54GWh of electricity each
year.
The installation of Mingyang’s 20MW
turbine secures the title for world’s largest turbine installation, beating out
Chinese competitor Dongfang Electric Corporation which announced only a few months ago that it had installed an 18MW
turbine.
Dongfang’s 18MW turbine, at the time the world’s largest turbine,
itself boasted a rotor diameter of 260 metres and was capable of generating
72GWh of electricity each year.