Wind Energy in New Mexico
New Mexico went from zero to a wind powerhouse in 25 years. Now comes the next chapter.
In 1999, New Mexico had no wind energy capacity. Today, 38% of the State’s electric grid runs on wind ranking New Mexico 9th in the nation for installed wind energy. With major new projects coming online this year, the State is on the verge of another leap forward. And with that growth comes a challenge the industry has been slow to solve: what happens to blades when they come down.
Nationally in installed wind energy capacity
Wind facilities producing 4,429 MW of power as of 2025
Of the state’s electric grid powered by wind
Turbine blades within 120 miles of the proposed facility
A STORY OF RAPID GROWTH
New Mexico’s wind energy story is one of the fastest build-outs in the country. From a standing start in 1999, the State reached 4,235 MW of capacity by 2022 and continues to grow. Today, 29 utility-scale facilities generate enough wind power to cover more than a third of the State’s electricity needs.
That growth is accelerating. Two major projects one already operating, the other completing construction this month (June 2026) will bring tens of thousands of additional blades into service in the coming years, all within range of the proposed EVSWA Facility.
Zero wind power capacity in New Mexico
4,235 MW of installed capacity built in just over two decades
29 facilities, 4,429 MW-38% of the state’s electric grid
SunZia Wind Farm completes the largest wind project in the Western Hemisphere
KEY WIND FARMS IN NEW MEXICO
Western Spirit Wind Farm
Location: Central New Mexico
Turbines: 377
Blades: 1,131
Distance to EVSWA: Within 100 Miles
Sagamore Wind Farm
Location: Roosevelt County
Capacity: 522 MW
Turbines: 240
Blades: 720
Distance to EVSWA: Within 180 Miles
SunZia Wind Farm
Location: Near Corona, NM (Lincoln County)
Capacity: 3,500 MW
Turbines: 916
Blades: 2,748
Distance to EVSWA: Within 70 Miles
Largest in Western Hemisphere – completing 2026
A note on blade lifespan: Wind blades are designed to last 20-30 years under optimal conditions, but in practice, they typically last closer to 10 years. That means SunZia and other farms coming online now will begin generating decommissioned blades well within the next decade before a regional recycling solution is in place in New Mexico.
WHERE NEW MEXICO’S WIND FARMS ARE AND WHY LOCATION MATTERS
This map shows the locations of operating utility-scale wind farms across the State. The proposed EVSWA facility near Moriarty sits in the heart of New Mexico’s wind energy corridor within 120 miles of 1,382 planned or developed turbines representing more than 4,146 blades. Note: the map does not include proposed or under-development projects.
Geography is one of the strongest arguments in favor of this Facility. The Estancia Valley sits at the center of New Mexico’s wind energy activity close enough to multiple farms to make blade transport economical, and far enough from major population centers to accommodate industrial-scale operations. Within a 120-mile radius of the proposed EVSWA site, there are already 1,382 planned or developed wind turbines representing over 4,146 blades. That’s before accounting for projects still in development, which the current map does not reflect. As New Mexico’s wind capacity continues to grow, the case for a facility here grows as well.