BSS
  10 Apr 2022, 09:04

Favourable breezes boost Spain's wind power sector

   VILLAR DE LOS NAVARROS, Spain, April 10, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Buoyed by a
surge in investment and new projects, wind power has become Spain's main
source of electricity generation just as Europe seeks to curb its energy
imports from Russia.

   "We are on suitable ground here," said Joaquin Garcia Latorre, project
director at Enel Green Power Espana, pointing to gigantic masts erected on
the heights of the tiny northeastern village of Villar de los Navarros.

   The Spanish-Italian firm picked this spot, which is well exposed to the
wind, to set up a 180-megawatt wind farm, one of the country's biggest.

   Dubbed Tico Wind, its 43 wind turbines started producing power in
November, said Latorre while workers around him tended to the turbines, which
are over 100 metres (328 feet) high.

   "There are between 2,500 and 3,000 hours of wind here per year," he added.

   The wind farm will be able to produce 471 gigawatt hours per year --
enough to meet the demands of 148,000 households -- after it becomes fully
operational in a month.

   These types of projects have popped up across Spain in recent years,
making it Europe's second-biggest wind power producer after Germany for
installed capacity and the world's fifth biggest.

   Wind power became the main source of electricity production in Spain last
year, accounting for 23 percent, ahead of nuclear (21 percent) and gas (17
percent), according to national grid operator REE.

   The sector "benefits from a favourable situation" although "brakes" remain
on its development, such as a dependency on government auctions, said
Francisco Valverde Sanchez, renewables specialist at electricity consultants
Menta Energia.

   - Investor interest -

   Following a boom in the 2000s thanks to generous public financial aid, the
sector suffered a sudden halt when subsidies were slashed in 2013 during
Spain's economic crisis.

   It has since charged ahead. Spain, which has a total of 1,265 wind farms,
had an installed wind power capacity of 28.1 gigawatts in 2021, up from 23.4
gigawatts in 2018, according to industry group AEE.

   With large swathes of sparsely populated land, a favourable legal
framework and cutting edge wind turbine makers, Spain is one of the most
"interesting" markets for wind power investors, said AEE director general
Juan Virgilio Marquez.

   Spain is home to several sector heavyweights such as Iberdrola and
Naturgay, making it a top exporter of wind power equipment. "This explains
the dynamism of the sector," said Marquez.

   Investor interest has even come from outside of the energy sector.

   In November Spain's Amancio Ortega, the founder of fast fashion giant Zara
and one of the world's richest men, injected 245 million euros ($268 million)
in a wind farm in the northeastern region of Aragon.

   - Energy 'breadbasket' -

   Spain in 2020 pledged to generate 74 percent of its electricity from
renewable sources by 2030, up from 47 percent.

   To meet this target, Spain is counting on the development of offshore wind
power, a sector that is in its infancy.

   But since Spain has thousands of kilometres of coastline, offshore wind
has lots of room to grow.

   "This is an ambitious goal," said Valverde Sanchez, arguing that
government bureaucracy around wind farm projects must be reduced for it to be
met.

   Nearly 600 wind power projects are currently under study by the
government, according to AEE.

   As part of its plan to respond to the economic fallout from Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, Spain has pledged to speed up the approval of wind power
projects of less than 75 megawatts.

   "Our country had enough natural resources to become Europe's leading
producer and exporter of renewable energy," Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said
Wednesday, adding this could be key to help the European Union meet its goal
of "energy independence".

   Since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, Brussels has declared a
mission to cut the EU's Russian gas imports by two thirds this year and to
end the use of Russian gas by 2027.

   Spain "could become the energy 'breadbasket' of Europe," said Virgilio
Marquez.