Henan Yanling Shuhai Wind Plant is a 53.8MW onshore wind power project. It is located in Henan, China. The project is currently active. It has been developed in multiple phases. Post completion of construction, the project got commissioned in November 2020.

Project Type Total Capacity (MW) Active Capacity (MW) Pipeline Capacity (MW) Project Status Project Location Project Developer
Onshore 53.8 53.8 Active Henan, China CGN New Energy Holdings

Description

The project is developed and owned by CGN New Energy Holdings. The company has a stake of 100%.

Development Status

The project is currently active. The project got commissioned in November 2020.

Contractors Involved

Henan Yanling Shuhai Wind Plant (Henan Yanling Shuhai Wind Plant_Phase I) is equipped with Zhejiang Windey Wind Generating Engineering WD131-2200 turbines. The phase consists of 19 turbines with 2.2MW nameplate capacity.

Henan Yanling Shuhai Wind Plant (Henan Yanling Shuhai Wind Plant_Phase II) is equipped with Zhejiang Windey Wind Generating Engineering WD156-3000 turbines. The phase consists of 4 turbines with 3MW nameplate capacity.

About CGN New Energy Holdings

CGN New Energy Holdings Co Ltd (CGN New Energy), a subsidiary of CGN Energy International Holdings Co Ltd, is an independent power producer. It generates electricity and steam using conventional and non-conventional energy sources. The company acquires clean and renewable power generation projects besides developing greenfield and brownfield projects. CGN New Energy constructs and operates wind, solar, gas-fired, coal-fired, oil-fired, hydro, cogeneration, and fuel cell plants in China and South Korea. The company’s portfolio of assets also comprises steam project. Its major customers are electricity off-takers. The company sells power through Korea Power Exchange. CGN New Energy is headquartered in Hong Kong.

Methodology

All power projects included in this report are drawn from GlobalData’s Power Intelligence Center. The information regarding the project parameters is sourced through secondary information sources such as electric utilities, equipment manufacturers, developers, project proponent’s – news, deals and financial reporting, regulatory body, associations, government planning reports and publications. Wherever needed the information is further validated through primary from various stakeholders across the power value chain and professionals from leading players within the power sector.