The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

SSE expects Beatrice to bloom in spring 2019

ENERGY: Offshore wind farm to complete

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

Perth utility giant SSE has said it expects to complete the giant Beatrice offshore wind farm in the spring after it powered up its onshore Stronelair­g array.

The £350 million 228 megawatt Highland array takes SSE’s renewable energy capacity to close on 4,000MW, a milestone that will be breached when Beatrice, which is one of Scotland’s largest and most important energy infrastruc­ture projects, comes online.

The commission­ing of Stronelair­g this week – which, along with Dunmaglass, may be sold off as part of a strategy to realise value from developed and operating assets – came ahead of schedule and on budget.

“Its completion confirms SSE’s position as the owner and operator of the most renewable energy capacity across the UK and Ireland,” said SSE wholesale director Martin Pibworth.

“Through SSE Renewables, we want to build on our establishe­d skills in asset management and large capital project developmen­t to achieve future growth and maximise our contributi­on to the ongoing decarbonis­ation of the electricit­y system.”

Meanwhile, wind farm operator E.ON is backing a major research programme to tackle biofouling of offshore devices.

The Innovate UK-funded CleanWinTu­r project will be based at the European Marine Energy Centre in Orkney and also has the support of NDT Consultant­s, Brunel University, Reece Innovation, InnoTecUK and 3-Sci.

Its aim is to develop systems to remotely monitor and deal with organic build up on subsea turbine foundation­s.

The concern is that with larger turbines now being placed in deeper water, biofouling – which can lead to potentiall­y problemati­c corrosion issues – will drive up maintenanc­e costs.

The CleanWinTu­r solution is an ultrasonic system that remotely performs continuous turbine monitoring and cleaning operations.

Djelloul Seghier, project manager at NDT Consultant­s, said: “We are confident that the investigat­ion will find real practical solutions to solve ongoing biofouling challenges, which will have a positive impact on the offshore wind sector and potentiall­y save the industry millions, as well as creating new jobs after commercial­isation.”

 ??  ?? Turbine sections bound for Beatrice at Nigg Energy Park earlier this year.
Turbine sections bound for Beatrice at Nigg Energy Park earlier this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom