The Scotsman

Atlantis’ £1.5m Meygen boost

- By EMMA NEWLANDS

Sustainabl­e energy specialist Simec Atlantis Energy has announced that its flagship Meygen project has been awarded £1.5 million to fund the ongoing expansion of what it says is the world’s largest tidal stream power project.

The business – led by Australian Tim Cornelius – said the sum will be used to design, procure, install, connect and commission the subsea hub and associated infrastruc­ture, “which is a key enabler for future array phases, as it will deliver cost reductions in power production by connecting multiple turbines to a single export cable”.

The sum is from the Scottish Government’s £10m Saltire Tidal Energy Challenge Fund, which supports the commercial deployment of tidal energy generation in Scottish waters.

Atlantis added that the grant award will prove the applicatio­n and benefits of subsea hub for the global tidal power industry. “Once proven, the hub will be made available to project developers to help to achieve cost-competitiv­e commercial deployment across the sector.”

Because of the grant award, Atlantis' Turbine and Engineerin­g Services (ATES) arm will be awarded a £2.4m engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on contract for delivery and installati­on of the subsea hub by the Meygen project company onsite in the Pentland Firth. The subsea hub, which will be assembled and tested in Scotland, will be installed later this year.

Cornelius said: “The next phase of Meygen, which will supply ocean energy to a large data centre to be built in Scotland, requires us to deliver cost competitiv­e energy to our future customers and the use of subsea hubs to reduce the number of export cables required to deliver this power from the 40 x 2 [megawatt] turbines we plan to install is central to our plans. This is a wonderful developmen­t for the Meygen project, our ATES division and the tidal power sector in the UK.”

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