EnBW Baltic 1 is the first commercial offshore wind farm of Germany in the Baltic Sea. Siemens supplied 21 SWT 2.3-93 wind turbines for the 48.3 megawatt wind farm.[1] EnBW Baltic 1 is located about 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) north of the Darss-Zingst Peninsula and covers about seven square kilometers. Work started in July 2010;[2][3] the wind farm was officially commissioned on 2 May 2011.[4]
Due to the Kriegers Flak Combined Grid Solution, power from Sweden (via Zealand), the 600 MW Kriegers Flak, the 288 MW Baltic 2 is sent via Baltic 1 to Germany, and is synchronized to the Nordic grid (not the German grid) via a 150 kV 400 MW alternating current subsea cable.[5][6]
Generation
Energy-Substation of EnBW Baltic 1 Offshore windfarm in the Baltic Sea
^Two Important New Offshore Windfarm Contracts Signed by Nordsee – GeoSea
^"EnBW prelims state that Baltic 1 will be complete "in a few weeks time" from 2011-02-08". Archived from the original on 2011-04-11. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
^Connor, Richard; Darren Mara (2 May 2011). "Offshore wind park powers German hopes for non-nuclear future". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 2011-05-02.
^"Kriegers Flak Combined Grid Solution | Energinet". en.energinet.dk. Energinet.dk. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020.
^Garus, Katharina (2016-03-14). "ABB gets order for Kriegers Flak onshore converter". ABB. Retrieved 2016-08-22 – via offshorewindindustry.com.
^Knight, Sara (29 May 2015). "Politics block German offshore wind link". Windpower Monthly. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
LORC Knowledge - Datasheet for Baltic 1 Offshore Wind Farm
"Life Currents", a 2019 Deutsche Welle television program discussing alternative energy narrated in English; A segment describing Baltic 1 begins at 10:10