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100+ US-made wind turbines are headed to 2 RWE Texas projects

GE Vernova is going to supply more than 100 US-made wind turbines to renewables developer RWE for 308 megawatts (MW) of wind projects in west Texas.

RWE is repowering its 127 MW Forest Creek wind farm near Big Spring, Texas, and will kick off construction of the 181 MW Honey Mesquite project in fall 2025. These two projects will deliver 308 MW of clean energy with 109 of GE Vernova’s 2.82 MW wind turbines.

Construction is now officially underway at Forest Creek, bringing some big upgrades that’ll extend the wind farm’s life, which was commissioned in 2006, by another 30 years. The original wind towers, turbines, and other gear are all being decommissioned, and 45 new GE Vernova turbines are each getting fresh foundations. Forest Creek is set to be back online by the end of 2025. RWE is teaming up with Wanzek Construction (part of MasTec Renewables) to recycle or repurpose the old blades, rotors, and nacelles.

Repowering is becoming big business – GE Vernova’s onshore wind business announced in January that it received orders in 2024 to repower over 1 gigawatt (GW) of wind turbines in the US.

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RWE’s new wind farm, Honey Mesquite, in Glasscock County will begin construction later this year and is expected to come online in late 2026.

Together, the two projects will create hundreds of construction jobs and bring in millions in new economic activity to the region. RWE, the US’s third-largest renewables company, says it’s invested $9 billion in Texas since 2007 when Forest Creek first began operations.

Scott Stalica, executive director of North American commercial operations at GE Vernova, said, “These projects are another example of how wind power can support the country’s growing energy needs while creating US jobs and bolstering energy security.”

Texas generates more wind power than any other US state. In 2023, Texas led the US in utility-scale wind-powered electricity generation, producing nearly three-tenths of the country’s total, according to the EIA.


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Avatar for Michelle Lewis Michelle Lewis

Michelle Lewis is a writer and editor on Electrek and an editor on DroneDJ, 9to5Mac, and 9to5Google. She lives in White River Junction, Vermont. She has previously worked for Fast Company, the Guardian, News Deeply, Time, and others. Message Michelle on Twitter or at michelle@9to5mac.com. Check out her personal blog.