The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Holyrood accused over supply chain

- HAMISH PENMAN

Aunion has accused the Scottish Government of being “deliberate­ly misleading” after it suggested Westminste­r was to blame for supply chain firms north of the border missing out on offshore wind contracts.

Holyrood published its long-awaited Offshore Wind Policy Statement yesterday, setting out plans for the country to achieve 11 gig a watts( GW ) of installed offshore wind capacity by the end of the decade, enough to power about eight million homes.

It also confirmed plans first set out in January to introduce commitment­s for developers to layout potential contract opportunit­ies for domestic companies, with “contractua­l consequenc­es” for those that failed to comply.

According to the government, Crown Estate Scotland is considerin­g “potential consequenc­es”, including the “potential terminatio­n of option agreements”.

In the run- up to the inaugural ScotWind leasing round in June, industry experts voiced concerns that without contractua­l obligation­s, developers may continue to overlook Scotland’s supply chain.

Workers and unions were left reeling last month after work for SSE Renewables’ major Seagreen offshore wind developmen­t off the coast of Angus went overseas rather than to Fife- based Burntislan­d Fabricatio­ns (BiFab).

That was closely followed by Holyrood deciding to pull financial support for the firm, which BiFab owner DF Barnes has said will make winning the contract for eight turbine jackets on the NnG wind farm project off the Fife coast “very challengin­g”.

The government said in its policy statement that price pressures arising from the Contracts for Difference (CfD) scheme, which is a UK Government reserved issue, had led to fabricatio­n contracts being issued to yards overseas.

It also said ministers would be pushing for reform so there is a “greater emphasis on the quality of bids”.

But Pat Rafferty, the Unite union’s Scottish secretary, argued there were “many levers” the Scottish Government could pull.

Mr Rafferty said: “The Scottish Government ’s latest Offshore Wind Policy Statement is an unfortunat­e phrase because that’s all we have substantiv­ely had from them – hot air. Unite fully appreciate­s that the Contracts for Difference process is a reserved issue but as we have repeatedly pointed out there are many lever sat the Scottish Government’s disposal, so to simply blame the lack of outcomes on this is deliberate­ly misleading and disingenuo­us.

“The onshore and offshore wind sector in Scotland is on life support. We have the BiFab yards and CS Wind in

Campbeltow­n sitting idle. There is no irony lost that this latest statement by the Scottish Government comes as they have just walked away from the BiFab yards. It is hollow and blames everyone but themselves for this national disgrace.”

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said: “Any company wishing to apply through Sco tW ind , managed by Crown Estate Scotland, will have to submit a supply chain developmen­t statement setting out how they will help grow the supply chain.

“It will form part of the initial applicatio­n for seabed rights and will be shared with the Scottish Government, public sector partners and enterprise agencies.

“After consultati­on with Scottish ministers, Crown Estate Scotland has confirmed that it is considerin­g what potential consequenc­es will be establishe­d for

non-compliance with the commitment­s laid out in an applicant’s statement, including the potential terminatio­n of option agreements.”

Nick Sharpe, director of communicat­ions and strategy at Scottish Renewab les, said: “Developers are working hard to provide Scottish companies with the opportunit­ies they need to invest and succeed in our growing offshore wind sector, and a number of projects are currently under way to that end, including through the Scottish Offshore Wind Energy Council.

“Truly collaborat­ive supply chain developmen­t statements are a way to bring certainty into the complex developmen­t processes which take place when building these multi billionpro­jects. We look forward to working with the Scottish Government on barriers to deployment.”

 ??  ?? PLAN: Holyrood aims for enough offshore wind to power 8 million homes by 2030.
PLAN: Holyrood aims for enough offshore wind to power 8 million homes by 2030.

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