The announcement follows successful completion of full load, back-to-back, testing of the turbine, which involved world leading power converter manufacturer, Converteam. The tests, undertaken at XEMC’s generator test facility in Xiangtan in China’s Hunan province, verified critical design parameters of performance and safety as well as overall effectiveness of the new turbine.
Converteam supplied its class leading Medium Voltage “MV7000” power converter for the 5-MW turbine. The power converter is a critical component of any wind turbine as it allows optimisation of the generator’s power output and ensures continuous operation even in low wind conditions and optimal grid stability. Converteam’s medium voltage MV7000 range of power converters recognises the trend towards the development of ever more powerful offshore wind turbines and the consequent demands for equipment of the highest efficiency and reliability.
Mr. Zhao Wenhong, General Manager of XEMC Wind spoke warmly of the co-operative working with Converteam: “It is clear that the future of offshore wind lies in the development of wind turbines of ever greater power output. Converteam has shown itself to be a reliable and co-operative partner which has technologically superior products as well as the engineering skills that are essential as we bring our most innovative new products to the global market.”
Converteam is a world leader in wind converters, with more than 20,000 MW installed worldwide. It was the first company to deliver a medium voltage converter in wind in 2004, leveraging strong expertise from other demanding industrial sectors (such as metals, marine, or oil and gas), where it has delivered more than 4,000 MW of MV7000 power converters to date.
“We are very proud of this new reference for a medium voltage converter in wind. Medium Voltage is gaining more and more interest from the offshore wind industry as the power of turbines increases, due to the demand of the offshore market,” concluded Alain Guy, Converteam’s Vice President Global Wind.
XEMC plans to initially install two of this new class of turbines by the end of 2010, one in China and the other in Europe.
For additional information:
Xiangtan Electric Manufacturing Corporation
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