Pinnebog Wind Park is a 51MW onshore wind power project. It is located in Michigan, the US. The project is currently active. It has been developed in single phase. Post completion of construction, the project got commissioned in December 2016.

Project Type Total Capacity (MW) Active Capacity (MW) Pipeline Capacity (MW) Project Status Project Location Project Developer
Onshore 51 51 Active Michigan, the US DTE Energy

Description

The project is developed and owned by DTE Energy.

The project supplies enough clean energy to power 24,000 households. The project cost is $92.859m.

The project has 96m high towers.

Development Status

The project is currently active. The project got commissioned in December 2016.

Power Purchase Agreement

DTE Energy and General Motors are the power offtakers from the project.

Contractors Involved

Aristeo Construction was selected to render EPC services for the wind power project.

GE Renewable Energy was selected as the turbine supplier for the wind power project. The company provided 30 units of 1.7-100 turbines, each with 1.7MW nameplate capacity.

About DTE Energy

DTE Energy Co (DTE Energy) is an energy utility. It develops and manages energy-related businesses and services. The company generates, procures, transmits, distributes and sells electricity; procures, stores, transports, distributes and sells natural gas. DTE Energy produces power using steam, nuclear, biomass, natural gas, oil, hydro, wind and solar sources. It also markets and trades power, natural gas and environmental products; energy financial instruments; and provides energy and asset management services using energy commodity derivative instruments. The company serves residential, commercial and industrial customers in southeastern Michigan and other regions in the country. DTE Energy is headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, the US.

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.