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PLANNING CONSENT ALLOWS FOR ‘NEXT GENERATION’ TURBINES AT EAST ANGLIA THREE OFFSHORE WINDFARM

07/08/2017

ScottishPower Renewables has today (7th August 2017) received planning approval from the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), Greg Clark MP,  for the East Anglia THREE offshore windfarm with an output capacity of up to 1,200 megawatts (MW).  

The planning consent will allow for the installation of larger and more efficient ‘next generation’ turbines, up to a tip height of 247 metres. This is two-and-a-half times the size of Big Ben (96 metres). To be built 69 kilometres off the coast of Norfolk, the windfarm could produce enough electricity to power the annual demands of nearly one million homes*.

ScottishPower Renewables believes that next generation technology will help to ensure that offshore wind is one of the cheapest forms of low carbon electricity. The company’s East Anglia ONE scheme is the best value project to go in to construction in the UK (£119 MW/h), and costs are expected to reduce even further in future auctions.

Keith Anderson, CEO of ScottishPower Renewables, said: “Offshore wind has delivered on its promises from the outset. Our sector has met every technical and political challenge, grown the UK’s supply chain, and improved the technology at a rapid pace to allow projects to be deployed in ever harsher conditions. At the same time, the level of cost reductions achieved would more commonly be seen in consumer electronics.

“In a little over a decade, our sector has delivered substantial amounts of green electricity for the UK, supported billions of pounds of UK investment and created thousands of high quality jobs.

"With the support of a highly-skilled supply chain, East Anglia THREE will further enhance the UK’s leading position in offshore wind. No other sector ticks all of the boxes in its ability to support the Government’s plans for rebalancing the economy and promoting economic diversity through the Industrial Strategy. 

“Major contracts are already being delivered in towns and cities spread out all across the UK.  Offshore wind has supported jobs and investment in Hull, Hartlepool, Lowestoft, Great Yarmouth, Grimsby, Teesside, Tyneside, Fife, Machrihanish and Belfast to name but a few. Large-scale projects like East Anglia THREE will continue to help to encourage economic regeneration where it is needed most.”

Will Apps, Head of Energy Development at The Crown Estate, said: “It is great to see the East Anglia THREE project pass this significant milestone. Through the continued efforts of ScottishPower Renewables, and their industry peers, the UK now benefits from a strong development pipeline of more than 11GW of consented capacity. This is in addition to the projects that are already built or are on track to supply 10% of the UK’s electricity demand by 2020. The offshore wind industry continues to deliver as a large-scale, affordable and reliable choice for UK power generation."

ScottishPower Renewables is currently delivering the East Anglia ONE project, which has a capacity of 714 MW and is due to be fully operational in 2020. The company is developing four projects in total in the area, with a capacity of 3,500 MW.

East Anglia THREE will cover an area of up to 305 square kilometres and will require up to 172 wind turbines to build the full capacity. 

ScottishPower Renewables will now commence work on preparing the project for the next phase. The regulatory framework in the UK requires that offshore windfarm developers enter pre-qualified projects into a Contracts for Difference (CfD) auction process, where the most economic projects are selected to receive a contract. If successful in future CfD auctions, ScottishPower Renewables would like to see construction starting around 2022, with the project up and running by 2025.

East Anglia THREE

In total, East Anglia THREE will require:

  • Up to four offshore collector stations and up to two offshore converter station platforms;
  • Up to one offshore platform housing accommodation facilities;
  • Subsea inter-array cables between the wind turbines and converter station and collector station platforms;
  • Up to four subsea export cables to transmit electricity from the offshore platforms to shore;
  • Up to four interconnector cables between the East Anglia ONE and East Anglia THREE Projects;
  • Landfall at Bawdsey with onshore transition pits to join the offshore and onshore cables;
  • Up to four onshore underground cables pulled through existing ducting to be laid by East Anglia ONE, running for approximately 37 km from landfall to the connection point at Bramford, Suffolk, with jointing pits, to transmit electricity to a new onshore transformer substation;
  • An onshore transformer substation at Bramford, Suffolk, to connect the offshore windfarm to the National Grid

ENDS

 

*Based on the following calculation: 1200 MW (installed capacity) x 0.367 “offshore wind” average load factor (Digest of UK Energy Statistics) x 8,760 hours (hours per year) / 3.900MWh (average domestic annual consumption) = 989,200 homes powered equivalent

 

Notes to Editors:

 

  • Case Study – Career Opportunities in Offshore Wind

 

Large clean energy developers like ScottishPower Renewables are engaging with schools, technical colleges and universities up and down the country. The sector offers a wide range of skilled, well-paying jobs with long-term prospects and the potential for worldwide travel.

 

Christie Paterson, Assistant offshore environment, ScottishPower Renewables

Christie is a student at the University of Edinburgh, currently completing a Master of Science in Environmental Sustainability with the support of a ScottishPower Foundation Scholarship. 

The course, coupled with exposure to the renewables industry through a summer internship with ScottishPower Renewables, ignited her interest in renewable energy, and understanding climate change mitigation.

During her undergraduate, Christie participated in the pilot year of the award winning and internationally recognised Young Leaders Development Programme delivered by the 2050 Climate Group. Using the skills she developed, she now volunteers with ChangeWorks, one of Scotland’s largest environmental charities, delivering recycling and waste minimisation community workshops to aid Edinburgh's transition to becoming a zero waste city.

In conjunction with her studies and volunteering, Christie is completing her second internship with ScottishPower Renewables, supporting the Offshore Environment Team in delivering projects in East Anglia, as well as our French and German offshore wind projects. Christie will take on a permanent role as assistant offshore environmental manager, following the completion of her MSc in September.

East Anglia THREE
Christie Paterson, Assistant offshore environment, ScottishPower Renewables

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