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Canadian Wind Farms

installed wind capacity

What’s a wind farm exactly?

It’s no secret that using the wind to create electricity has been around for a long time; remember windmills? When the wind turns the blades of a windmill, it spins a turbine inside a small generator to produce electricity. A typical modern wind turbine will produce enough electricity to meet the annual needs of about 500 homes.

“Wind farms” bring together groups of wind turbines to produce enough electricity to power thousands of homes. The world's largest wind farm, located in Texas, consists of 421 turbines producing 735 Megawatts of electricity. The turbines cover nearly 47,000 acres (190 km²) of land.

There is a big difference between a wind farm (known as “large wind”) and “small wind”. “Small wind” usually involves either a small turbine powering a house or a medium-sized turbine powering a farm, business or a small community. Large wind provides electricity to the electric grid (rather than just a home or business).

Right now, wind farms in Canada have a capacity of 5,403MW – enough to power over 1 million homes or equivalent to about 2 % of Canada’s total electricity demand. Canada’s wind resource is well distributed in rural areas throughout the country with various wind farms in operation, and more now under construction.

Canada’s massive hydroelectric resource, which provides 60% of Canada’s electricity, is an excellent complement for wind energy and provides an excellent opportunity to integrate more wind energy into the system than is the case in many other countries.

 

Build Your Own Small Wind Project
Want to power your home, small business or community with wind energy? Visit www.smallwindenergy.ca

 

Use Your Land’s Wind
Do you have a good wind resource on your property? Want to benefit from installing a wind farm on your land? Find the answers to all this and more in our Land Use Fact Sheet, or Planning a Wind Farm.



 
     
 
 
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