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Customer Success Story

SunZia

SunZia enables the largest HVDC Light® Installation in the United States, linking large wind farms in New Mexico to the grid in Arizona to bring more renewable energy to the Southwest and southern California.



Hitachi Energy is selected by renewable energy company Pattern Energy to supply its high-voltage direct current (HVDC) technology for the SunZia Southwest Transmission Project, which will connect two large wind farms in New Mexico to the power grid in Arizona and southern California.

Hitachi Energy’s HVDC Light® technology and MACH digital control platform will enable the efficient transfer of huge volumes of renewable wind power over a distance of around 870 km for integration into the regional power grid. This project will significantly increase the availability of sustainable energy for homes and businesses throughout the region.

The HVDC link will provide the Southwest with 3,000 MW of clean, renewable power, which is equal to what could be generated from three traditional power plants.  It will be the largest voltage source converter (VSC) installation in the United States and one of the largest worldwide, as well as one of the country’s longest HVDC connections. 

The SunZia transmission project is a ±525 kV bipolar HVDC link between Corona, New Mexico, and Red Rock, Arizona. Hitachi Energy has already started work on the design and engineering of the two HVDC Light® converter stations, one at either end of the link. The HVDC Light® station in New Mexico converts the power from AC to DC for transport in the overhead lines, then back to AC at the HVDC Light® station in Arizona for integration into the receiving grid.

Hitachi Energy pioneered commercial HVDC technology almost 70 years ago and has delivered more than half of the HVDC projects in North America. These include the Pacific Intertie transmission system which transfers electricity from the Pacific Northwest to Los Angeles, the Quebec-New England link which was the first large-scale multi-terminal HVDC transmission system in the world, and the Maritime link which was the first voltage source converter project in Canada and connects the Islands of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, supporting the integration of renewable energy sources and improving grid stability.

Commissioning year:

2025

Power Rating total

3,000 MW (bipolar 2 × 1,500 MW)

AC/DC voltage

±525 kV

Detailed info

The highest capacity HVDC voltage source converter (VSC) installation and one of the longest HVDC links in the U.S., connecting New Mexico and Arizona

Transmission

Bipolar overhead line with a dedicated metallic return conductor

Length of Overhead line

Approx. 870 km

Technology

Bipolar HVDC VSC link

Application

Onshore wind clusters consisting of two major wind farms