What we build
Utility-scale wind.
Modern wind is the largest source of new clean generation in the US by capacity added. It is also the most unforgiving. If the resource, the transmission, the landowner posture, or the offtake doesn't line up, the project doesn't get built. Saga develops wind in places where all four do.
What a Saga wind project looks like
- 100 to 400 MW onshore, typically in the Western Interconnection and SPP footprints
- Modern platforms: 3.5 to 6 MW turbines, IEC Class II or III
- Utility, cooperative, or corporate offtake with tenor matched to tax-equity structure
- Met-tower-validated resource assessments, not desktop estimates
How we work with landowners
Wind is extraordinary for landowners because the footprint is small. Turbines and access roads take a few percent of a parcel, and the rest stays in whatever use it was already in, whether that's grazing, dryland crops, or conservation. We work with property owners across the country to assess whether their land suits wind development, walk through the lease economics in plain language, and continue the partnership from initial review through commercial operation.
From origination through construction
Our team has, at prior companies, contributed to the development and construction of multiple gigawatts of utility-scale wind. That matters because winning wind projects depend on careful groundwork: developing strategic frameworks, meeting local, state, and federal rules, siting turbines around resource and setback constraints, and maintaining open communication with landowners through the multi-year development arc.
Development engineering
For landowners and partners ready to move forward, we provide full development engineering support, covering turbine positioning, collection systems, substation configuration, and medium- to high-voltage design. Getting those decisions right early is how you compress construction risk and deliver a project at an economical, financeable cost of energy.