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B.C. might get world's biggest wind farm
Canadian Press
Tuesday, February 19, 2002
PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. -- A Swiss company is hoping to build one of the world's
biggest power-generating wind farms near this northcoast B.C. city.
Prime Minister Jean Chretien was on hand Tuesday for a ceremonial contract
signing in Berlin with Swiss-based ABB, which submitted a joint development
application with another company, Uniterre Resources Ltd., to federal and
provincial government officials last Friday.
There will have to be a feasibility study first, but test sites could be running
by this summer, said North Coast MLA Bill Belsey.
"It is major,'' said Belsey, who is confident the project will proceed.
A four-year construction phase would provide about 1000 jobs for four years, 500
of them local, said Don Allan, manager of the Prince Rupert Economic Development
Commission.
There could be as many as 3,000 spinoff jobs in the service industry, he added.
The proposed farm site is near the Queen Charlotte Islands, roughly 100
kilometres east of Prince Rupert.
Wind conditions at the site average 8.6 metres a second, or 31 kilometres an
hour. When completed, the project will be the largest wind farm in Canada and
will likely expand this country's installed wind power energy by 350 percent
A high-voltage cable will connect the wind farm with a B.C. Hydro grid at a
substation east of Prince Rupert.
Belsey said a plant could be constructed in Prince Rupert to build blades for
the wind turbines.
It would be good news for the city's local economy, which floundered after
declines in the forest industry and fisheries in recent years.
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