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Bangui Wind Farm is a wind farm in Bangui, Ilocos Norte, Philippines.

The wind farm uses 20


units of 70-metre (230 ft) high VestasV82 1.65 MW wind turbines, arranged on a single row
stretching along a nine-kilometer shoreline off Bangui Bay, facing the West Philippine Sea.

The Northwind Bangui Bay Project is located at the municipality of Bangui, Ilocos Norte,
Philippines. Located at the north-west tip of Luzon island, the wind turbines face the sea from
where the wind blows towards the land. Its location along the shore is optimal in removing
windbreaks and has a terrain roughness of 0. The site is free of any trees and vegetation, and
stretches approximately 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) long and 100 metres (330 ft) wide. The area is
undeveloped and uninhabited making it ideal as a site and poses no threat to the environment.
The location of the Philippines being near the Asia-Pacific monsoon belt is ideal for installing
wind turbines. The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services
Administration attests that the Philippines has a mean average of about 31 watts per square meter
(W/m2) of wind power density.

NorthWind Power Development Corporation generates and sells electricity using wind energy. It
sells electricity to the Ilocos Norte Electric Cooperative and to customers in the province of
Ilocos Norte. The company was incorporated in 2000 and is based in Taguig, the Philippines.
NorthWind Power Development Corporation operates as a subsidiary of AC Energy Holdings,
Inc.

According to the NorthWind Power Development Corporation which oversees the windmills,
“the production of clean energy in the town of Bangui is an example for the world to see. For
visitors and the local community—not to mention the international community—the sight of the
wind turbines serves to raise awareness on the need for environmentally sound practices. We
need green technology, and the Bangui Bay Project shows that ‘going green’ can be a reality.
This is green technology at its best.”

This green technology generates renewable energy coming from the wind–both abundant and
inexhaustible–which, unlike fossil fuels, does not require burning and therefore it does not
release harmful gases and other pollutants into the atmosphere and create so much problems with
the ozone.  The whole process does not exacerbate the growing dilemma of global warming. 
About the only complaint from the local fishermen is that those giant turbines generate so much
noise that they claim somehow scare the fish away.

Phase I of the NorthWind power project in Bangui Bay consists of 15 wind turbines, each
capable of producing electricity up to a maximum capacity of 1.65 MW, for a total of
24.75 MW. The 15 on-shore turbines are spaced 326 metres (1,070 ft) apart, each 70 metres
(230 ft) high, with 41 metres (135 ft) long blades, with a rotor diameter of 82 metres (269 ft) and
a wind swept area of 5,281 square metres (56,840 sq ft).
Phase II, was completed on August 2008, and added 5 more wind turbines with the same
capacity, and brought the total capacity to 33 MW. All 20 turbines describes a graceful arc
reflecting the shoreline of Bangui Bay, facing the West Philippine Sea.
n 1996, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) conducted a wind resource analysis
and mapping study. It concluded that various areas in the Philippines are ideal for wind power
installation. These areas include Bangui and Burgos towns in Ilocos Norte, Batanes and Babuyan
Islands, which are north of Luzon and the higher interior terrain of Mindoro, Samar, Leyte,
Panay, Negros, Cebu, Palawan and Eastern Mindanao. The study led to the inception of the wind
farm project. NorthWind Power Development Corp. developed (and maintains and operates) the
project, while Vestas Wind Systems, a Danish firm, supplied the wind turbine-generator units
(WTGs) for the site, similar to those already found in Denmark. The project was to have been
developed in three phases.
Phase I of the project erected 15 wind turbines spaced 236 meters apart on-shore. This was
inaugurated on June 18, 2005 and attended by Former First Lady Imelda Marcos, then
Governor Bongbong Marcos, Former DOE Secretary Vincent Perez, Undersecretary Peter Abaya
and Dr. Robert Yap, Jesuit priest and Project Director of CD4CDM project of klima, who also
conducted the invocation and blessing of the wind turbines.
Ratified by the NorthWind Power Development Corp and the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development through the World Bank Prototype Carbon Fund, the
Northwind Bangui Bay Project was the first project in the Philippines to have the Emissions
Reduction Purchase Agreement (ERPA) under the Clean Development Mechanism. The Bangui
Bay Project is also the first Philippine recipient of the Carbon Emission Reduction Certificates
(CER’s) from the Executive Board of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change.
In 2006, the project produced a 5% discount of the weighted average price in the wholesale
electricity spot market (WESM) or a generated savings of approximately USD1.4 million (PhP
70 million) for the INEC electricity consumers. The project cost for Phase I amounted to
USD$23 million.
Phase II was completed in June 2008 adding 5 more wind turbines carrying the same capacity as
those in Phase I and raising the total capacity to 33MW. All of these formed the arc of Bangui
Bay, a fusion of technological and natural elegance. Phase II raises the project’s power
contribution to Ilocos Norte from 40% to 50%. Phase III is expected to raise the total expenditure
for the whole project to USD$54 million.
NorthWind Power Devt. Corp. has started the construction of Phase III of the project where 6
new wind turbines will be erected with a total of 18 MW installed capacity. Siemens' SWT 108
3.0 MW will be installed in phase 3, where each wind turbines have an installed capacity of 3
MW and a rotor diameter of 108 meters. The project is targeted to be completed in the middle of
2015
The Windmills, the first wind power plant in the country and Southeast Asia, has been seen as
setting the trend in the development of renewable energy this side of the world.
Officials say this project is a sustainable energy that could help minimize the cost of electricity
consumption in favor of the customers within the Ilocos region.
With the influx of tourists to the area, not far from the 120-year-old Cape Bojeador Lighthouse
in Burgos town west of here, livelihood entrepreneurs and makers of souvenir items have
literally sprouted.
Many houses have begun selling garlic and onions, straight from their farms.

The more enterprising and skilled ones make wooden replicas of the windmill, complete with
rotating blades, pebbles and seashells.

II. FIRST HOW DO WINDTURBINE WORK

MAIN COMPONENTS – what is a windmill?

AND PROCESS FLOW @

process flow of a windmill


How does a turbine generate electricity?

@ GOOD ENERGY

SEARCH @HOW DO WINDTURBINE WORKS

IV.

@safety programs of northwind power development corporation

@NOTHWINDSOLUTIONS

VI. REFERENCES

internet source @

https://www.bloomberg.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=9754891

https://ibangui.wordpress.com/category/northwind-power-development-corp/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangui_Wind_Farm

https://www.doe.gov.ph/energists/index.php/about-ener-gist/97-categorised/energy/energy-

resources/renewable-energy/wind-energy/11293-ilocos-norte-s-windmills-tourism-and-

energy-giants
https://www.smartdraw.com/process-flow-diagram/examples/wind-energy-process-flow-

diagram/

https://www.conserve-energy-future.com/how-windmills-work.php

http://goldpower.net/news/how-does-a-wind-turbine-generate-electricity/

https://northwindsolutions.com/about-us/

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