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This is a list of airborne wind energy or kite-energy organizations that are advancing airborne wind energy systems (AWES). In 2011 there were over 40 organizations involved worldwide, [1] but this number has increased to over 60 in 2017.
[3] [4] There has been a sudden increase in generating capacity, as the total wind power capacity in the state was just 9.7 MW in 2010. [5] Ohio's first large wind farm, Timber Road II near Payne in northwest Ohio, opened on October 6, 2011. [6] [7] It was surpassed in June 2012 by the 304 MW Blue Creek Wind Farm. [8]
Some wind industry associations, such as the Global Wind Energy Council, the World Wind Energy Association, and WindEurope, provide publicly available membership directories on their websites. Other wind industry associations, such as the Canadian Wind Energy Association and the American Wind Energy Association , have membership directories ...
Airborne wind energy (AWE) is the direct use or generation of wind energy by the use of aerodynamic or aerostatic lift devices. AWE technology is able to harvest high altitude winds, in contrast to wind turbines, which use a rotor mounted on a tower. The term high-altitude wind power (HAWP) has been used to refer to AWE systems. [1]
Columbus' municipal electric aggregation program projected to have locally generated green energy by this year, but three years on is getting none.
The Blue Creek Wind Farm spanning Paulding and Van Wert County became the largest wind farm in the U.S. state of Ohio at approximately 40,500 acres upon its completion in 2012. With a generating capacity of 304 megawatts (MW), it produces enough electricity to service the equivalent of about 76,000 homes.
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