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Published Date: 15 February 2009
UP TO 10 giant wind farms are to be built off the Scottish coastline as part of a revolution in providing green energy to homes and businesses throughout the country.
The Crown Estate, which owns the seabed out to the 12-mile British territorial limit, will tomorrow award "exclusivity agreements" to a range of power companies to develop 10 offshore wind farm sites.

The sites will be split evenly between the we
st and east coasts. Those in the west are expected to be in the relatively sheltered Irish Sea and Solway Firth areas off the south-west coast. In the east, they are likely to stretch in a line from Wick in the north to the Berwickshire coast in the south.

Each of the farms could have scores of turbines, 300ft tall, spread over several square miles of seabed.

If all 10 are built as planned, they are forecast to produce 6.4 gigawatts of power, more than doubling the amount of electricity produced by renewable forms of energy in Scotland at present and providing enough power for around four million homes.

The companies involved are understood to be some of Britain and Europe's biggest utility companies, which are likely to form consortia to exploit offshore wind power. They include Scottish and Southern, ScottishPower, Centrica, Swedish-owned Vattenfall, Germany's E.on, France's EDF, Danish company DONG, Npower and Ramco, an Aberdeen-based energy company.

The rising value of the euro means construction projects in the UK are now far cheaper than was previously the case for international consortia.

The wind farms will use undersea cables to transport their power ashore and connect to the national grid.

The advantage of siting them off south-west Scotland is that there are two existing nuclear power stations already hooked up to the grid and they are relatively close to the country's major centres of population.

The 10 exclusivity agreements are designed to allow developers to begin initial surveys and consultations on the sites, while the Scottish Government conducts an assessment of the environmental implications of siting such large structures within territorial waters.

The signing of exclusivity agreements is an important step towards realising the Scottish Government's intention of making Scotland the renewables powerhouse of Europe.

The emphasis on generating wind power is now switching offshore because of the difficulties of getting onshore wind farms through the planning process. Applications have been held up for years by objections and disputes over sites.

The new generation of offshore farms will be sited several miles out to sea, ending most objections about visual intrusion in rural areas, although developers will have to overcome concerns about wildlife movements and incursions on airport flight paths.

As the seabed owner, the Crown Estate will earn up to 2% of the value of the electricity generated, providing a lucrative annual windfall for the Treasury.

Rob Hastings, director of the Marine Estate at the Crown Estate, said: "The award of 10 exclusivity agreements is excellent news for the companies involved, the Crown Estate and for Scotland as a whole.

"We very much look forward to working with the companies on the development of these sites and the realisation of the enormous potential that these sites have to offer."

Scottish Government targets are to meet 50% of electricity demand from renewables by 2020, with an interim target of 31% by 2011.

The SNP administration at Holyrood is determined to support major renewables projects, especially offshore wind, as this is the technology that currently offers most hope of reducing the dependence on climate-changing fossil fuels, such as oil, gas and coal, without building new nuclear power stations.



The full article contains 610 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 February 2009 11:19 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Alternative energy sources
 
1

Gussie Fink-Nottle,

15/02/2009 00:45:19
"Enough power for around four million homes."

Waits for the pro-nuclear unionist cringe fraternity...'But what if the winds not blowing?'

Whiny manbitches!
2

The big picture.,

FL USA 15/02/2009 01:11:24
There could be no better investment than to invest in becoming energy independent! We need to utilize everything in out power to reduce our dependence on foreign oil including using our own natural resources. Create cheap clean energy, new badly needed green jobs, and reduce our dependence on foreign oil. The high cost of fuel this past year seriously damaged our economy and society. The cost of fuel effects every facet of consumer goods from production to shipping costs. After a brief reprieve gas is inching back up. OPEC will continue to cut production until they achieve their desired 80-100. per barrel. If all gasoline cars, trucks, and SUV's instead had plug-in electric drive trains, the amount of electricity needed to replace gasoline is about equal to the estimated wind energy potential of the state of North Dakota. There is a really good new book out by Jeff Wilson called The Manhattan Project of 2009 Energy Independence Now. http://www.themanhattanprojectof2009.com
3

Dr. James Wilkie,

Vienna 15/02/2009 08:24:14
And like the income from all the other vast Crown Estates properties in Scotland the proceeds from this scheme will flow direct to London. Did somebody tell Barnett?

4

greenhill,

15/02/2009 08:35:24
Re #1

You are a fool.Wind power/renewables will not provide base load."Clean" coal is pie in the sky.The SNP energy policy is a joke.

5

sceptic,

livingston 15/02/2009 08:51:06
With energy bills already 15% higher than they need to be to subsidise "green" energy how much extra is this lot going to cost? No wonder UK manufacturers struggle to compete on world markets
6

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 15/02/2009 09:01:39
6.4GW !!
That means they will get £2803200000 in subsidies every year.
This cash comes straight out of our pockets.
Windfarms are a rip off whether onshore or offshore.
Just when are people going to wake up and put a stop to this nonsense.
7

sceptic,

livingston 15/02/2009 09:11:18
"At an energy conference in Edinburgh last week policymakers admitted that the financial burden on households and businesses will only increase as governments push to achieve ambitious renewables targets."
8

dido-bendigo,

Scotland 15/02/2009 10:44:41
They really ought to read the international news!
http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,606763,00.html
9

Greenheatman,

TAIN 15/02/2009 10:45:39
How long must we put up with this kind of drivel - everbody knows that this 'article' is just a copy and past job' of the standard press release.

Using this tired unimaginative wind operated power factories that rely on induced nuclear of coal derived electricity to allow them to work in the first place is going to end in tears.

Google "gentec wats" and you will see Tomorrow's World today!
10

Margaret L,

Edinburgh 15/02/2009 11:53:41
Everyone knows that electricity generation has to be near the customesr to be economic. But then two weeks ago we read "One of the firms participating in the London Array project, under which the world's biggest offshore wind farm would be built in the outer Thames Estuary, has questioned the scheme's economic viability.

The Financial Times reported at the weekend that Paul Golby, chief executive of E.ON UK - which owns 30 per cent of the Array venture - says that "the economics [of the Array] are looking pretty difficult".

The newspaper headline was "Thames windfarm execs: We need more subsidy".

Oh well back to the drawing board.
11

Douglas,

Bathgate 15/02/2009 13:19:13
#5 Rules...: It might even generate some hard current sea.
12

The west awake,

Argyll 15/02/2009 16:49:50
Firstly, there should be mention in this article that the Crown estate has dragged their feet on this issue for so long that serious questions should be asked as to why.
Secondly, to those nitwits who equate onshore with offshore wind rates, offshore is roughly twice as productive as onshore.
And lastly, does any reasonable person actually believe all the successful companies above are rushing to do this because it is doomed to failure?
Offshore wind, onshore wind, wave and tidal, clean coal/CCS and hydro will work and will give Scotland a lead in renewable energy technology.
The Unionists seem to want us to repeat the onshore wind fiasco, where the lead in this wonderful technology passed from us to the Danes, who are now reaping a rich reward. The SNP won't let the UK scupper us again.
- Reason number umpteen to vote SNP.
13

greenhill,

15/02/2009 17:32:21
RE:The west awake,Argyll 15/02/2009 16:49:50 "does any reasonable person actually believe all the successful companies above are rushing to do this because it is doomed to failure?"

Oh yeah the truth is that successful companies are rushing to these projects because they come with huge subsidy: easy money.

Let us face it you are not reasonable because you are a liar. The lie you attempted to put forward was that such projects are independently viable and are attractive to free enterprise.

The truth is that private enterprise is quite happy to ponce off the state if the state chooses to throw money away on trendy vote winning gestures.

14

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 15/02/2009 18:44:23
"the west awake"
You are living in cloud cuckoo land man.
They say renewable but they only mean wind as at present it is the only show in town and they are in it for the money only. The current price of ROCS is over £51/MWh.
As even the wind industry can only count on 30% efficiency, exactly how does the numpty in chief Salmond work out that he can get 50% of Scotlands electricity from mainly wind power ?
It is a mathematical impossibility but wee Eck is too thick to realise it.
15

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 15/02/2009 20:50:00
15 Full of bluster as ever.
16

Margaret L,

Edinburgh 15/02/2009 21:04:17
#13 - I am bit hurt that you have not read my post. Because yours does not make sense in the light of it. Big companies are pulling out of offshore wind farms - not "rushing to do it".

Oh hang on I get it. You are believing what the Scotsman journalist is telling you. Strewth - get a life.
17

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 15/02/2009 21:20:17
#16 - Are you suggesting the numbers I quoted are wrong? If so would you care to explain why ?
Or are you a turbine hugger who can't argue the case for wind because you simply don't know.
18

SkeptikScot,

15/02/2009 22:27:20
This is very good news. But we can't afford to reject any energy source. Oil, gas, coal (clean if possible), nuclear, tidal and wind.
19

Mr. Lachie Todd,

Edinburgh 17/02/2009 14:27:11
The State of California is the world leader in windpower.
By 2010, it will be generating 20 percent of its electricity from renewables, including windpower.

By 2050, California expects to generate 50 percent of its electricity from renewables, including windpower.
The cost of a unit of electricity in California is currently cheaper than that generated by any other State in the Union.
Source: State of California website.

20

nuergy,

at home 24/06/2009 20:41:37
Decision has been made a decade ago.....the UK goverment has already identified that future power generation will come from a mix of locally produced renewables ie energy crops and our natural resources. The only real way of reducing carbon is using wind, tidal & the most readily available form of stored solar energy from the sun is in wood form sustainable forest, also of course by saving and reducing.

Nuergy Biomass Wood Pellet Boilers and Wood Chip Boilers are fast becoming a popular choice in the UK. Nuergy specialise in the distribution and installation of biomass wood pellet and wood chip boilers for Your Home, School, Office or Factory, supplying to the established heating industry and direct to the publicwwwdotnuergydotcom.

 

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