The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

‘Be bolder’ in going for contracts, firms urged Energy: North-east firms urged to apply for offshore wind supply work

- BY DAVID MCPHEE

North-east firms should “definitely” be bolder when going for offshore wind supply contracts, a project boss said yesterday.

Halvor Hoen Hersleth, plant manager at Equinor’s Hywind Scotland pilot park, said a “lower” number of local companies competed for contracts for the project than expected.

Hywind, the first floating

“blurb for four lines goes in here and in here and in here and into ”

offshore wind farm of its kind, has been producing power for more than a year.

The five-turbine developmen­t is 16 miles off the coast of Peterhead and can power around 20,000 homes.

Asked if north-east firms could do more to win orders, Mr Hersleth said: “Definitely. I think that in the operation and maintenanc­e phase there is almost none of the work that couldn’t be done locally once you have industry in place.

“As a part of the project execution phase there was a strong willingnes­s to look at the local content and it was very high on the project agenda. Firms have to be competitiv­e on cost and quality. the

“We ended up with a percentage which was lower than we would’ve wanted and that is something that we are continuous­ly working on.”

Mr Hersleth said Equinor was on the lookout for another floating wind site west of Shetland.

He added: “We are engaged in the work stream, and a dialogue with Crown Estate Scotland and Marine Scotland to look at potential sites, but there is nothing concrete yet.

“There are potential sites for floating wind all over the world; it’s potentiall­y the best upside compared to bottom-fixed turbines as 80% of the world’s oceans are at water depths where you need floating technology”.

Commenting on Hywind, he said: “It’s competing and in some cases beating the bottom-fixed industry.

“The few issues we had have been dealt with by Scottish technician­s.”

He continued: “Since November last year we have had an annual capacity factor of 56%, which is super high and beats the bottom-fixed average of 40%.” Rumours of an agreement between the UK and EU on financial services sent the pound higher yesterday, supported by the outlook from the Bank of England as it maintained interest rates.

Sterling jumped 1.5% to 1.297 US dollars and tracked 0.86% higher against the euro to 1.138.

Earlier in the day, reports suggested a deal had been struck “in principle” which would give UK financial services continued access to the bloc after Brexit.

The Bank of England’s monetary policy committee voted to hold interest rates at 0.75%.

Encouragin­g words from governor Mark Carney regarding the health of the economy should a Brexit deal be achieved helped support the boost to the pound.

The FTSE 100 fell 13.44 points to 7114.66 as oil stocks weighed on London’s main market.

Big risers included BT Group, up 20.7p to 261.25p, Smith & Nephew higher by 83.5p at £13.57, Just Eat up 38.4p to £6.46 and Melrose Industries higher by 9.8p at 178.45p.

 ??  ?? RENEWABLES: Hywind, which is the first floating offshore wind farm of its kind, has been producing power for more than a year now
RENEWABLES: Hywind, which is the first floating offshore wind farm of its kind, has been producing power for more than a year now

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom