UK Approves Construction of Two Offshore Wind Farms in North Sea

UK Approves Construction of Two Offshore Wind Farms in North Sea

Consent was given on Friday by the UK Government for the construction of two wind farms off the Norfolk Coast with a combined capacity of over 1GW. This means that 6.6GW of offshore wind power is now either operational, under construction or consented in the UK.

Ministers have given consent to Centrica and Warwick Energy for the construction of the offshore wind farms at Race Bank and Dudgeon respectively.

The two wind farms at Race Bank (580MW) and Dudgeon (560MW) in the Greater Wash could generate enough electricity to power around 730,000 homes. The projects represent around £3bn of investment.

An application for a third project at Docking Shoal, also off the Norfolk Coast, has however been refused due to the potential impact on seabirds in the area. These birds (Sandwich terns) are specially protected by environmental legislation.

Charles Hendry, Minister of State for Energy, said:

“The UK is racing ahead of the global field and these two new offshore wind farms underline this momentum. These two projects will not only bring us considerable amounts of clean energy, but significant investment and jobs too.  We have also shown that we are mindful of other consequences, such as the impact on bird populations, in deciding that it would not be appropriate to consent all three applications.”

[mappress]
Press Release, July 9, 2012