

Our policies of transparency and excellent reactivity place our customers, users, and data providers at the center of our business.įeel free to contact us directly about any questions you may have, or before placing an on-line order.
#HOME WIND POWER WIND MAP SERIES#
The Wind Power can also customize data to your precise market needs on request. The WAsP Climate Analyst is a freeware utility tool for wind energy engineers, which is designed for import, selection and analyses of wind data time series including generation of observed mean wind climates for wind resource assessment and observed extreme wind climates for IEC site assessment.
#HOME WIND POWER WIND MAP UPDATE#
We offer one-, two- or three-year update packages on an annual, bi-annual, quarterly or monthly basis. Our data is checked and revised over a rolling period of six months. We include not only large, high-profile projects, but also the smaller, independent ones. Our database provides direct and immediate access to information about regions, countries, manufacturers, types and numbers of turbines, hub heights, MWs/GWs, developers, operators, owners, and commissioning dates. The Wind Power tabulates data from a variety of players in the worldwide industry - wind farm developers, operators and owners, turbine manufacturers, to name only a few - into useable figures available in Excel, Csv, Tsv, Shape, Kmz and Kml formats. The Wind Power is a comprehensive database of detailed raw statistics on the rapidly growing sphere of wind energy and its supporting markets. 13 January 2015.“Sometimes in the wind of change, we find our greatest direction.”


Efforts by Duke Energy and NextEra Energy to develop a wind farm at Mays Lick were discontinued. In 2012 Mason County passed an ordinance which would prohibit the construction of large-scale wind farms., except in previously-designated industrial zones, but would permit mid to small scale turbines for use at a principal site, but not for sending the energy across electric transmission lines. KNEV made seed capital grants of $30,000 and investments ranging from $250,000 to $750,000+. The funds could have been used to stimulate private investment in Kentucky-based technology companies with high growth potential. The program concluded in 2017 and has not been renewed by State. Established in 2008, the Kentucky New Energy Ventures was a state program to incentivize the development and commercialization of alternative fuel and renewable energy products, processes, and services.
