Projects: Cemex - Victorville, CA

cemex victorville wind turbine ribbon cutting
cemex victorville wind turbine
3.2 MW
Project Size
3,800 MWh
Annual Production
3,120 Tons
Carbon Offset
424 Homes
Power Equivalent

2012 Cemex to cut emissions and costs with wind power

If you drive on National Trails Highway toward Oro Grande, it’s hard to miss two soaring wind turbines next to the CEMEX cement plant. To cut carbon emissions and energy costs, the cement manufacturer has built a total of four turbines — each nearly 400 feet from the ground to the tip of their blades. Two are at the company’s Victorville plant and the other two turbines are at the Black Mountain Quarry in an unincorporated area of Apple Valley. The two turbines in Victorville will produce an estimated 6,500 megawatt hours of electricity in an average year — enough to sustain 650 average homes, according to CEMEX. The project will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and stabilize energy costs for CEMEX, while preparing the company to comply with future carbon emission requirements, CEMEX wrote in a proposal to the city.

CEMEX partnered with Foundation Windpower, which specializes in building wind turbines on-site at California businesses facing high energy demands. Foundation Windpower will pay for the construction and maintenance of turbines and sells electricity to its clients. The Menlo Park-based company will pay an estimated $5 million to build each turbine at CEMEX, Engdahl said, in exchange for a long-term electricity purchase agreement. Foundation Windpower claims its customers will save hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars in power costs over the life of their projects. Wind is strong at the two sites, according to CEMEX, particularly during summer afternoon hours when purchasing electricity from the grid gets the most expensive and produces the most greenhouse gas.