OK Wind Farms
Utility-scale wind farms generate hundreds of megawatts of clean power, feeding the grid while reducing dependence on fossil fuels and supporting U.S. renewable energy goals. Often paired with battery storage and, in some regions, solar farms, they improve grid reliability, enable microgrid resilience, and strengthen the foundation for widespread electrification.
OK largest wind farms
| WIND FARM | MW | TURBINES | LOCATION |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skeleton Creek | 251 | 91 | Alfalfa County |
| Balko Wind | 300 | 162 | Beaver County |
| Bluestem | 198 | 60 | Beaver County |
| Ponderosa | 204 | 100 | Beaver County |
| Traverse Wind | 995 | 355 | Blaine County |
| Blue Canyon VI | 99 | 55 | Caddo County |
| Caddo | 303 | 110 | Caddo County |
| Minco II | 101 | 63 | Caddo County |
| Minco III | 111 | 60 | Caddo County |
| Minco IV | 130 | 61 | Caddo County |
| Canadian Hills | 298 | 135 | Canadian County |
| Kingfisher Wind | 180 | 90 | Canadian County |
| Weatherford Wind Energy Center | 114 | 71 | Custer County |
| Crossroads | 196 | 85 | Dewey County |
| Mammoth Plains | 199 | 117 | Dewey County |
| Seiling | 199 | 117 | Dewey County |
| Seiling 2 | 100 | 59 | Dewey County |
| Taloga | 130 | 54 | Dewey County |
| Great Western | 225 | 93 | Ellis County |
| Armadillo Flats | 247 | 126 | Garfield County |
| Chisholm View | 235 | 140 | Garfield County |
| Drift Sand | 108 | 54 | Grady County |
| Minco | 99 | 62 | Grady County |
| Redbed Plains | 99 | 48 | Grady County |
| Rush Springs Wind | 249 | 120 | Grady County |
| Grant Plains | 147 | 64 | Grant County |
| Grant Wind | 152 | 66 | Grant County |
| Diamond Spring | 304 | 112 | Johnston County |
| Frontier I | 200 | 61 | Kay County |
| Frontier II | 355 | 74 | Kay County |
| Kay Wind | 299 | 130 | Kay County |
| Rock Falls | 155 | 60 | Kay County |
| Thunder Ranch | 298 | 120 | Kay County |
| Kingfisher Wind | 118 | 59 | Kingfisher County |
| Red Dirt | 299 | 95 | Kingfisher County |
| Blue Canyon II | 151 | 84 | Kiowa County |
| Maverick Wind | 287 | 103 | Major County |
| Arbuckle Mountain | 100 | 50 | Murray County |
| Glass Sands Wind | 118 | 28 | Murray County |
| Origin | 150 | 75 | Murray County |
| Rockhaven Wind | 140 | 49 | Murray County |
| King Plains | 248 | 88 | Noble County |
| Osage Wind | 150 | 84 | Osage County |
| Wildhorse Mountain Wind Facility | 100 | 29 | Pushmataha County |
| Big Smile Wind Farm | 132 | 66 | Roger Mills County |
| Elk City | 99 | 43 | Roger Mills County |
| Elk City II | 101 | 66 | Roger Mills County |
| Red Hills | 123 | 82 | Roger Mills County |
| Goodwell | 200 | 100 | Texas County |
| Rocky Ridge I | 149 | 93 | Washita County |
| Sundance Wind | 199 | 72 | Woods County |
| Boiling Springs | 148 | 60 | Woodward County |
| Keenan II | 152 | 66 | Woodward County |
| OU Spirit | 101 | 44 | Woodward County |
| Persimmon Creek I | 199 | 80 | Woodward County |
Feeding directly into the grid, these wind projects reduce reliance on fossil fuels, help meet OK state and national renewable portfolio targets, and provide long-term stability for electrification efforts. Increasingly, wind farms are co-located with battery energy storage systems (BESS) and solar farms, creating hybrid renewable hubs that improve grid reliability and maximize land use. They also play an important role in microgrid deployments, offering resilient local power for communities, industries, and critical infrastructure.