Transpower, the owner and operator of New Zealand's high voltage transmission network, completed a $2.6 million project at the Woodville substation last week.
The project included major equipment replacement for the 95-year-old facility that provides power to Woodville and areas north and is also a critical node for the wider Tararua District with connections through to Dannevirke, Waipawa and Mangamaire.
Since 2007 it has also been the connection point for around 90MW of wind generation. It was an opportunity to bring Woodville up to today's standards of maintainability.
That meant replacing older equipment for new modern equivalents. Fifty-five-year-old circuit breakers that use bulk oil as an insulator were replaced with gas-insulated options that provide more features and take up less room. Around 29,000 litres of oil were removed from site for recycling as a result – helping Transpower's drive to reduce its own environmental footprint.
"With less componentry comes less need for maintenance and accordingly the maintenance interval can now shift from a 4 year to 8-year service," said Brendan Olsen, Transpower Lower North Island regional service manager.