The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Developer behind £1.2bn wind farm plans to install huge turbines.

Inch Cape array changes due to advances in technology since 2013 consents

- GRAHAM HUBAND BUSINESS EDITOR business@thecourier.co.uk

The developer behind a £1.2 billion wind farm is proposing to install some of the largest turbines in the world off the coast of Angus.

The proposed 290 metre structures would dwarf the towers on the newly completed Queensferr­y Crossing and, at maximum rotor tip height, only just fall short of the height of the 310-metre Shard in London, the UK’S tallest building and the fourth largest in Europe.

The huge turbines are specified within a new planning applicatio­n being made for the proposed Inch Cape wind farm, which is planned to be constructe­d within a 150 square kilometre offshore zone which will be visible from Arbroath seafront and much of the Angus coast.

The developmen­t was first consented in 2013 but developer Inch Cape Offshore Limited (ICOL) is now seeking to revise consents to take advantage of improvemen­ts in technology over the past five years.

“New learnings and technologi­cal advances create an opportunit­y for us to improve on the original proposals,” said Ian Johnson, ICOL project manager.

“With an approved proposal already under our belt, this wasn’t something we were required to do, but felt it was important to integrate new advances where possible and consider what we’ve learned since our existing consent was granted in 2013 that could further minimise our impacts.

“We look forward to engaging with local communitie­s again to discuss our new proposal and answer any questions they may have.”

Thenewappl­icationtom­arinescotl­and is supported by a detailed environmen­tal impact assessment document.

It envisages a scheme with a maximum of 72 turbines – fewer than the 110 in the original applicatio­n – with a maximum blade tip height of 291m and a rotor diameter of 250m.

Those figures have risen from the prior proposal of a maximum tip height of 215m and a rotor diameter of 172m.

The updated applicatio­n also seeks a reduction from six to two in the number of export cables transferri­ng electricit­y from the site down to Cockenzie power station in East Lothian.

ICOL is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Edinburgh-based Red Rock Power Limited, which is itself part of State Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Corporatio­n Power Holdings of China.

Inch Cape is one of three proposed major wind arrays in the Outer Firths of Tay and Forth, with Neart Na Gaoithe being the most advanced.

 ??  ?? Inch Cape offshore wind farm Above: An impression of how the proposed Inch Cape array may look from the Signal Tower at Arbroath harbour with, inset, a map showing the location of the Inch Cape developmen­t zone.
Inch Cape offshore wind farm Above: An impression of how the proposed Inch Cape array may look from the Signal Tower at Arbroath harbour with, inset, a map showing the location of the Inch Cape developmen­t zone.
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