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Scottish park gets sustainable for £80 million

on . Posted in Onshore Wind

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Soon, the park in Fife, Scotland will generate clean energy.

Admiralty Road Business Park in Rosyth recently expressed its intention of contributing to a greener Scotland through the installation of three wind turbines.

The project, which is being undertaken by Cameron Harris Design and Build (CHDB), will erect three 15-m wind turbines that would produce 15 kilowatts (kW) of electricity individually. The park is currently being developed for £80 million, with 13,000 square meters already renovated, and is expected to be home to up to 60 jobs.

The facilitation of CHDB’s goal to give clients like Rosyth a greener, more efficient technology in renewable sources led them to use air source heat pumps and high efficiency lighting systems on plot A in the park.

This will be enhanced through the erection of wind turbines in plot 7C in the park.

Rosyth is a town with a population of approximately 15,000. It is located on the Firth of Forth on Scotland's east coast, three miles (4.8 km) south of the center of Dunfermline. Rosyth was built to form the coastal port of the modern city and Royal Burgh of Dunfermline in the early part of the 20th century.


- Sunshine T. Santiago


References:

1 http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Rosyth
2 http://www.thecourier.co.uk/output/2009/07/22/newsstory13493343t0.asp


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