Hartford Courant

4 EU nations plan North Sea wind farms for energy shift

- By Jan M. Olsen

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Four European Union countries plan to speed up the continent’s green transition and help wean it off Russian energy imports through a large new project to build wind farms in the North Sea, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n has announced.

She said her country, together with Belgium, the Netherland­s and Germany, “want to increase our total offshore wind capacity fourfold by 2030 and tenfold by 2050.” The plan is to provide energy to 230 million European households.

“(This) means that we are able, the four of us, to deliver more than half of all offshore wind needed to reach climate neutrality in the European Union,” Frederikse­n added.

She spoke Wednesday at an event in Denmark attended by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, and European Commission

President Ursula von der Leyen.

Scholz said the scale of the project “will be of an unimaginab­le order.”

“The North Sea is the place where, with the offshore wind parks, we can produce electricit­y on a large scale, in the large quantities we need — and can already do today in a way that it is economical,” he said.

The new wind farms will be built along the four countries’ North Sea coasts.

Frederikse­n said the project would help address the challenges posed by Russia’s war against Ukraine and climate change, both which, she said, “affect the European economy and the safety of our peoples.”

Von der Leyen, who earlier in the day presented an Eu-wide energy package in Brussels, said the war in Ukraine “highlights the risks we have taken to be too dependent on Russian fossil fuels.”

The four countries pledged to set “ambitious combined targets for offshore wind of at least 65 GW by 2030,” their energy and climate ministers said in a statement. It said they also aim to “more than double our total 2030-capacity of offshore wind to at least 150 GW by 2050.”

This, they said, would deliver more than half the capacity needed for the EU to reach climate neutrality.

“We are taking our ambition to yet another level to make sure that we become independen­t from Russian fossil fuels as quickly as possible,” von der Leyen said in Brussels when announcing the package, dubbed REPOWEREU.

The EU has pledged to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 55% compared with 1990 levels by 2030, and to get to net zero emissions by 2050.

The European Commission has set an overall target of generating 300 gigawatts of offshore energy by 2050.

Along with climate change, the war in Ukraine has made EU nations eager to reduce their dependence on Russian natural gas and oil. In 2021, the EU imported roughly 40% of its gas and 25% of its oil from Russia.

At a March 11 summit, EU leaders agreed in principle to phase out Russian gas, oil and coal imports by 2027.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER/AP 2019 ?? A fishing boat passes wind turbines on the North Sea coast of Germany. Four European Union countries plan to boost offshore wind capacity tenfold by 2050.
MARTIN MEISSNER/AP 2019 A fishing boat passes wind turbines on the North Sea coast of Germany. Four European Union countries plan to boost offshore wind capacity tenfold by 2050.

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