Lake Ostrowo, Poland

Print

Investment in a cleaner future

The 17 wind turbines near Lake Ostrowo in Northern Poland are not only driven by the wind but by the investment tools of the Kyoto Protocol.
 
At Lake Ostrowo in Northern Poland, old Viking soil meets high tech energy. Close to the historic city of Wolin, 17 wind turbines produce electricity for 35,000 Polish households.
 
The wind farm is now visited by tourists, energy companies and developers, its success providing inspiration for more wind power in Poland.
 
Poland is currently 95 % powered by coal, which produces carbon dioxide, and is looking for sustainable alternatives. Wind power is one of the favourites. Lake Ostrowo is among the largest wind farms in Poland, proving that wind power works.
 
The Lake Ostrowo wind farm was set up as a Joint Implementation (JI) project, one of the flexible mechanisms of the Kyoto Protocol. JI projects generate emission reduction units (ERU) in transition economies, including former soviet states and Eastern European countries, that can be used by industrialised countries to help them meet their own Kyoto target.
The Joint Implementation initiative is supported by the Danish government through the allocation of more than 336,000 ERUs (Emissions Reduction Units) over the period 2008-2012, making it more attractive for the Danish owner, DONG Energy, to develop and run the wind farm..

FACTS: LAKE OSTROWO WIND FARM

Size: The Lake Ostrowo comprises 17 turbines, each with a capacity of 1.8 Megawatts (MW), manufactured by Danish company Vestas

Total capacity: 30.6 MW

Electricity production: 90 million kilowatt hours (kWh), equivalent to supplying 35,000 Polish households

Climate: The wind farm saves Poland 80,000 tonnes of CO2 each year, as well as avoiding 240 tonnes of nitrogen oxide and 100 tonnes of dust

Opening: The wind farm was opened in September 2007
  

Global Wind Energy Council, Rue d'Arlon 63-65, 1040 Brussels, Belgium, Tel: +32 2 400 1029, Fax: +32 2 546 1944, Email: info@gwec.net


Dwarf