Marine Management Organisation and Sea Bed User and Developer Group Work shop Approved by Blyth Offshore became the UKs first offshore wind farm when it was commissioned in December 2000 Crown Estate owns almost all the UK coastline out to 12 nautical miles ID: 808583
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Slide1
30
th
March 2017
Prepared by: Sophie Hartfield
Marine Management Organisation and Sea Bed User and Developer Group Work shop
Approved by:
Slide2Blyth Offshore became the UK's first offshore wind farm when it was commissioned in December 2000.
Crown Estate owns almost all the UK coastline out to 12 nautical miles.
‘Round 1’ -
18 sites of up to 30 turbines
‘Round 2’ - 15 projects of up to 7.2 GW
‘Round 3 – Target of 33 GW by 2020
Brief History of Offshore Wind in the UKThere are now enough UK offshore wind farm sites built, under construction or in the planning system to power around 5 million
homes.
Slide3Developers and Projects
Slide4In Construction and Future Projects
Project
Phase of Development
Capacity (MW)
Galloper
Construction336
Hornsea
Project OneConstruction1200EA ONEAbout to enter construction714Triton KnollConsented, pre FID900
Dogger Bank
Creyke
Beck A&B
Consented, pre FID
2,400
Dogger Bank
Teeside
A & B
Consented, pre FID
2,400
Hornsea
Project Two
Consented, pre FID
1800
EA THREE
Awaiting consent
1,200
Vanguard
In Planning
1,800
Hornsea
Project Three
In Planning
2400
Thanet Extension
In Planning
147
Hornsea
Project
Four
TBC
TBC
Boreas
Coming soon
1,800
EA North
Coming soon
TBC
Slide55
Unparalleled experience and track record
Under construction
In operation
Under development
Walney Extension
Walney 1 & 2
Westermost
Rough
Isle of Man
West of Duddon Sands
Barrow
Burbo Bank Ext.
Burbo Bank
Gunfleet Sands 3
Gunfleet Sands 1 & 2
Lincs
London Array
Race Bank
Horns Rev 1 & 2
Hornsea 1
Anholt
Middelgrunden
Vindeby
Nysted
German Cluster
Borkum Riffgrund 2
Borkum Riffgrund 1
Gode Wind 1
Gode Wind 3 & 4
Gode Wind 2
Bay State Wind
21
offshore wind farms in operation
7 offshore wind farms under construction
14
Partnerships
26 years of experience and track record
in the offshore wind sector
1991
2017
3.8 GW
under construction
2,000
Dedicated employees
3.6 GW
Constructed capacity
7.5 million
Europeans with clean electricity
3.6 GW
World's leading operator
Hornsea 2 & 3 & 4
Ocean Wind
Avedøre
DONG Energy Wind Power geographical footprint
APAC
Taipei office
Borssele 1&2
DONG Energy Wind Power overview
Slide6Country
Asset
FID
Gross capacity (MW)
Westermost Rough
2013
210
Borkum Riffgrund 1
2011
312
West of
Duddon Sands
2011
389
Anholt
2010
400
London Array
2009
630
Walney
1&2
2009
367
Horns Rev 2
2007
209
Strong construction track-record due to full EPC
1
control
6
Engineering, procurement and construction
Leader in operating offshore wind farms
# of operated turbines January 2017
2x
Source
: Bloomberg New Energy Finance January 2017
Vattenfall
E.On
Innogy
SSE
Centrica
Statoil
Proven construction track-record and leading operating capabilities
Slide77
Major institutional investors are partners in DONG Energy's offshore wind projects
Walney I & II (50.1%)
367 MW (2009 / 2010)
(KIRKBI)
West of Duddon Sands (50%)
389 MW (2010)
Burbo Bank Extension (50%)
258 MW (2016)
Lincs (25%)
270 MW (
2017)*
Gunfleet Sands (50.1%)
173 MW (2011)
Anholt (50%)
400 MW (2011)
Horns Rev 1 (40%)
160 MW (2006)
Nysted (42.7%)
166 MW (2010)
Gode Wind 2 (50%)
252 MW (2014)
Gode Wind 1 (50%)
330 MW (2015)
Westermost Rough (50%)
210 MW (2014)
London Array (25%)
630 MW
(2009
/ 2014)
Borkum Riffgrund 1 (50%)
312 MW (2012)
(KIRKBI)
( ) represents DONG Energy ownership interest
*
The transaction is subject to approval by the competition authorities. The transaction is expected to be completed in February 2017
Race Bank (50%)
573 MW (2016)
Proven track record in developing long-term partnerships
Slide8Getting energy to shore8Building an offshore wind farm
Slide9Potential Environmental Impacts to be considered – environment: DesignationsConservation valueMarine mammalsBirdsBenthos
Fish & ShellfishBathymetry ArchaeologyCoastal processes
NewtsBats
9
Supporting the Consent application, pre construction, construction and operation
Potential Environmental Impacts to be considered – other infrastructure:
OWFs
Oil & Gas
Aggregates
Cables and Pipelines
Ports and Navigational Dredging
Disposal Sites
Carbon Capture and Storage
Aquaculture
Potential Environmental Impacts to be considered – social:
Local Impact Assessment
Commercial Fisheries
Shipping and navigation
Archaeology
Leisure and Tourism
Visual impacts
Supply chain
Slide10Challenges
Further Offshore & Lowering the Cost of Energy
Supply Chain Bottlenecks
Lack of data on impacts
Grid connection constraints
Limited choice of contractors/suppliersDeep water engineering
Health and SafetyO&M Strategies
Still a “young” industryNew DesignationsCommercial FisheriesBREXITResourcingLowering the Cost of Energy
Slide1111