An overspeed protection system for a wind turbine having a hub and at least one rotor blade mounted to the hub includes a rotation sensor adapted for measuring a rotor speed of said wind turbine; a comparator connected to the rotation sensor and adapted for comparing the measured rotor speed with a predetermined threshold value of the rotor speed wherein the comparator outputs a signal indicative of the comparison; and an auxiliary pitch drive controller connected to the comparator and adapted to receive the signal indicative of the comparison, the auxiliary pitch drive controller being further adapted for controlling a pitch drive unit of the wind turbine independently of a main turbine controller and, if the threshold value is exceeded, to adjust a pitch angle of the rotor blade of the wind turbine so that aerodynamic braking of the wind turbine is effected.
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Mozambique has an abundant and unexploited solar resource which could be harnessed for utility scale as well as residential PV for both on/off grid electrification. The following map shows the global horizontal irradiation profile of Mozambique which. .
Mozambique has a potential wind capacity of 4.5 GW, of which about 25% has potential for immediate connection to the existing grid. The provinces with the most potential are Tete,. .
Large scale renewable projects are becoming a point of interest for investment in Mozambique, specifically solar and hydro. Mozambique’s. .
As of 2020, Mozambique has one of the highest hydropower potential in Africa, estimated at more than 12,000 MW, especially in the Tete province, at the Zambezi River,. .
Overall, Mozambique has a rich biomass potential of over 2 GW. Charcoal and firewood are important fuels for cooking energy purposes in Mozambique, as well as in other countries. Mozambique plans to move forward with solar power plants in at least five parts of the country by 2030, with an estimated capacity of 1,000 MegaWatts (MW) of electricity production, promising a “true solar revolution”.
[pdf] Broad development of solar power in Greece started in the 2000s, with installations of photovoltaic systems skyrocketing from 2009 because of the appealing feed-in tariffs introduced and the corresponding regulations for domestic applications of rooftop solar PV. However, funding the FITs created an. .
Solar power in Greece has been driven by a combination of government incentives and equipment cost reductions. The installation boom started in the late. .
Two new photovoltaic parks are currently (August 2024) under construction in Western Macedonia with a total capacity of 1,000MW. This new energy project is. .
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