Blog

Scotland’s biggest offshore wind farm at full power - BBC News

Scotland's biggest offshore wind farm has begun operating at full capacity, removing emissions from power supply.

Seagreen, off the Angus coast, can generate enough electricity to power two-thirds of Scotland's households. Power Grid Inverter

Scotland’s biggest offshore wind farm at full power - BBC News

The £3bn project, comprising 114 giant turbines, has been more than a decade in the making.

But operator SSE says the consenting time needs to be halved if there are to be enough turbines to meet the government's climate change targets.

The company says Seagreen will displace more than two million tonnes of CO2 each year, helping reduce the UK's reliance on fossil fuels for generating electricity.

The array sits about 17 miles from the coast and in 58 metres of water, making it the deepest fixed wind farm in the world.

Those in deeper waters, like the Hywind project off Peterhead, are engineered using floating turbines.

Originally planned with 150 turbines, the number was reduced because larger generators made it possible to harvest the same amount of electricity with fewer structures.

The company is now exploring the feasibility of another phase of development by adding a further 36 turbines.

The first power was generated in August 2022 but it has taken another year for it to be fully completed.

About 700 long-term jobs will be supported by Seagreen, half of which are based in Scotland.

Around 60 full-time positions in operation and maintenance are to be based at the service facility in Montrose port.

Seagreen is a joint venture between TotalEnergies and SSE Renewables.

SSE Renewables' director of offshore wind, Paul Cooley, told BBC Scotland News that decisions taken now will determine whether 2030 targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions will be met by the Scottish and UK governments.

He said: "I think if we don't speed things up we'll just not hit the targets.

"That's the reality so there's a real imperative now to move much faster in terms of hurdles like grids, like consents and like pricing in the supply chain."

The UK's offshore wind capacity is growing rapidly.

Just last week, the first electricity was generated from SSE's 277 turbine Dogger Bank project off the coast of East Yorkshire.

Final construction is also under way on the Neart na Gaoith (NnG) wind farm off Fife which has faced a legal challenge by RSPB Scotland because of concerns over migratory birds.

Claire Mack from the industry body Scottish Renewables said there was a huge pipeline of projects in Scotland thanks to an abundance of wind.

"We've got over 20 offshore wind projects leased within Scotland which is one of the largest commercial leasing sites that we have across the world."

Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.

Scotland's biggest offshore wind farm powers up

ScotWind offshore auction raises £700m

Biden meets Netanyahu as Gaza hospital blast overshadows Israel visit

Biden backs Israel's account of Gaza hospital blast

House in disarray as resistance hardens to Jordan

'Grab the children and leave': BBC reporter flees Israel bomb warning

How same-sex unions are rooted in Indian tradition

Halle Bailey is Glamor's 'Gen Z gamechanger'

Why The Matrix seems more relevant than ever in 2023

House still has no Speaker. Here's what happens next

Belt and Road: Is China's trillion-dollar gamble worth it?

Has Canada's legal cannabis industry gone to pot?

Family tell of heartbreak after Israel kidnap live-stream

Why Egypt is reluctant to open crossing with Gaza

Europe's unlikely digital nomad hub

Scorsese on finding his new star

The sneaky trend hurting finances

Scotland’s biggest offshore wind farm at full power - BBC News

Sun Grid Tie Inverter © 2023 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.