Construction World March 2015
PROJECTS AND CONTRACTS
which add a further eco-friendly dimension to the project through lower material usage and transport costs. “Secondly, the towers are being manu- factured with self-compacting concrete (SCC). SCC is comparatively new to this country and besides being the largest wind farm to date, Gouda is also the coun- try’s largest SCC project thus far. In fact it is using approximately half the amount of concrete used for the precast segments of the Gautrain project. “Without SCC the project would have beenmuchmore complex, involving external vibration and more expensive moulds. “The SCC is being supplied by Megamix, which has a batching plant close to Concrete Units. The SCC mix is one of the critical components of the whole manufacturing process and one member of the Concrete Growth team is permanently based at Megamix to monitor the batching process. Rainy weather can affect the mix because the amount of water used is critical. Even a slight water overdose can cause segregation and a loss of strength. We have a system in place and have had very few problems with the mixes. Needless to say the slump flow of every batch is tested at Concrete Units before being pumped into the moulds.” Gouws added that turbine towers gener- ally amounts to approximately 15 to 20% of a wind farm’s capital cost, a figure which does not include the foundations. In most instances, the higher one goes, the better the wind, and for heights above 80 m, concrete towers tends to be less expensive than imported steel towers, thus impacting on the cost of the electricity generated positively. To date, most wind turbines in South Africa have been mounted on steel towers, – which have the disadvantage of being imported and a comparatively low local labour and job-creation componnent.’ By contrast, concrete wind towers come with high local-content inputs and by default carry a much higher job generating capacity. For example, over 95% of the raw materials for Gouda’s concrete towers including the reinforcing steel were sourced locally.
installed they are post-tensioned by Acciona Wind Power’s engineers. The segments, 782 in all, are being cast at Concrete Units’ factory using five moulds which were shipped to South Africa from Poland and Brazil by Acciona Wind Power. Each mould section is two metres long and the sections were attached to each other using precision-based laser technology. Moreover, to ensure the accurate layout of the steel reinforcing, Concrete Units is using special reinforcing jigs. Casting A maximum of five segments are cast daily. Various types of inserts and sockets are cast into specific positions to locate the mechan- ical (ladders, lifts and landings) and elec- trical equipment (cable trays etc) required inside the towers. Spaces for doors are cast into every fourth T1 segment. Mould strip- ping takes place either late into the night shift or first thing every morning by which time the segments have reached a compres- sive strength of 25MPa. After three days the moulds are given a light post-tensioning prior to being transported to Gouda on extra heavy- duty low-bed trucks. Segment T1 which is 5,5mwide and T2, which spans 4,8m, require police escorts. The smaller segments, using normal escourts, are generally shipped first which then allows the trucks to return for a second load. Innovative products Santie Gouws, managing director of Concrete Growth, says that in terms of concrete manufacture, the Gouda Wind Farm project is cutting edge. “For example, the tower segments were designed according to Euopean as opposed to SANS codes. This allows us to design up to 115 MPa cube strength rather than the 60MPa which forms part of the SANS struc- tural concrete code. The Gouda towers are being manufactured to 75MPa which is the strength required to handle the loading of the turbines and the wind. This high char- acteristic strength has allowed Acciona’s engineers to opt for lighter concrete sections
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Renewable energy Moreover, wind power forms part of the Government’s renewable energy strategy which was formulated by the Departments of Energy and of Trade and Industry in 2011. The CSIR was tasked with researching its job creation and economic development poten- tial, and it was on the basis of the CSIR’s report that the DTI increased the local-con- tent wind-farm requirement for Round Three of its Renewable Energy Programme, of which Gouda forms a part. Alternative energy is scheduled to add 9 000 MW (equivalent to two coal-fired power stations) by 2030, and it seems a safe bet that precast concrete towers will play a major role in rounds four and five of the programme. This article was first published in Precast
CONSTRUCTION WORLD MARCH 2015
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