The tallest wind turbine in Limburg has recently been spinning on the BESIX Infra site in Bilzen. The turbine with an impressive tip height of 234 metres was officially inaugurated this afternoon by Flemish Energy Minister Zuhal Demir. This happened in the presence of BESIX and its subsidiary BESIX Infra, project developer ENGIE, the public-private partnership Wind4Flanders and the Bilzen city council.
With an electrical capacity of 4.2 megawatts, the wind turbine will generate 10,500 megawatt hours of renewable energy annually, good to cover the annual consumption of 3,200 families. Although the renewable electricity produced will primarily serve to supply BESIX Infra's business processes on the Bilzen site. 80 % of its electricity needs will be covered, the remaining electricity will be injected into the grid. The arrival of the wind turbine will result in avoided CO₂ emissions of 4,800 tonnes per year, equivalent to removing 2,400 diesel cars from circulation.
The wind turbine at BESIX Infra is part of the Zuidwind project, which aims to expand the number of wind turbines in the Genk-Zuid industrial area and accelerate the energy transition for local industry. As a major green energy producer in Belgium, ENGIE has a significant stake in this project. In addition to the wind turbine at BESIX Infra, ENGIE will install two others at other industrial sites. These two have now been licensed and are expected to be built in the course of next year.
The wind turbine market has evolved enormously in recent years and ENGIE continues to innovate in its projects. In 2009, ENGIE already built two 'first generation' wind turbines on the former Ford Genk site, and one more nearby afterwards. With a tip height of about 150 metres and a capacity of about 2 megawatts, these produce a lot less than the new generation of wind turbines. The new turbine at BESIX Infra will produce as much as ENGIE's three existing ones in the Genk-Zuid industrial area combined.