Monticello’s $126 million wind farm nears startup

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Monticello’s $126 million wind farm nears startup

Massive project boosts local revenues, but power goes to the grid
So far, 23 out of 27 giant wind turbines have been installed along the foothills of the Abajo Mountains, just northwest of Monticello.
Windmills now dot the hillside above Monticello. They are aligned in three rows along a series of undulating ridges on 3,600 acres of private land that sPower leases from a group of landowners.
Towers reach 280 feet tall and are topped off with a 2.3-megawatt turbine made by General Electric. Three, 187-foot-long fiberglass blades catch the wind.
Charlie Gustafson is the windmills’ construction manager. “They start producing power at 9-12 miles per hour, and if the wind is over 57 miles per hour they shut down,” he said.
A construction worker is dwarfed by the size of the blade he is working on. “It takes just three or four workers at the top to bolt it on and hook up the electrical systems with a GE engineer,” said construction manager Charlie Gustafson. “They access the top from stairs inside the tower.”
Windmills are nearly finished by Monticello. “We’re on schedule and expect to get our commercial operations permit Dec. 27 and go online,” said construction manager Charlie Gustafson.

Monticello’s $126 million wind farm nears startup

So far, 23 out of 27 giant wind turbines have been installed along the foothills of the Abajo Mountains, just northwest of Monticello.
Windmills now dot the hillside above Monticello. They are aligned in three rows along a series of undulating ridges on 3,600 acres of private land that sPower leases from a group of landowners.
Towers reach 280 feet tall and are topped off with a 2.3-megawatt turbine made by General Electric. Three, 187-foot-long fiberglass blades catch the wind.
Charlie Gustafson is the windmills’ construction manager. “They start producing power at 9-12 miles per hour, and if the wind is over 57 miles per hour they shut down,” he said.
A construction worker is dwarfed by the size of the blade he is working on. “It takes just three or four workers at the top to bolt it on and hook up the electrical systems with a GE engineer,” said construction manager Charlie Gustafson. “They access the top from stairs inside the tower.”
Windmills are nearly finished by Monticello. “We’re on schedule and expect to get our commercial operations permit Dec. 27 and go online,” said construction manager Charlie Gustafson.
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