Western Daily Press

Robotics firm sign Japanese offshore deal

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ABRISTOL-BASED offshore technology and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) company has agreed a major partnershi­p deal with a Japanese wind turbine inspection firm.

Rovco, a provider of subsea robotic and hydrograph­ic surveys, has signed a memorandum of understand­ing with Horizon Ocean Management (HOM) – a subsidiary joint venture between Mitsui and Hokutaku.

The agreement will see both parties work together to analyse the Japanese offshore wind market and develop a better understand­ing of in-country demand, as well as developing asset integrity programmes of work to support the maintenanc­e of critical infrastruc­ture.

HOM was formed in 2021 by Japanese conglomera­te Mitsui and Hokutaku, the country’s leading wind turbine maintenanc­e company. Rovco said its joint business developmen­t agreement with HOM would strengthen commercial ties and allow the two organisati­ons to promote new projects.

The two companies have already launched a joint proposal for a number of future operations and maintenanc­e projects, according to Rovco.

Simon Miller, chief revenue officer at Rovco, said: “This partnershi­p marks a significan­t milestone for Rovco. The Japanese offshore wind sector is rapidly upscaling, and this is an exciting opportunit­y for us to work alongside Horizon Ocean Management, sharing vital insight into subsea asset integrity best practices.”

Last year, the Japanese government unveiled ambitious plans for offshore wind expansion, including targets of 10GW of offshore wind by 2030 and installati­ons of a combined 30GW to 4GW by 2040, along with a cost reduction target by industry of eight to nine yen/kWh (0.04 to 0.05p/ kWh) between 2030 and 2035.

Nobuyuki Takagi, managing director of HOM, added: “The European offshore wind supply chain has a wealth of marine and subsea experience via its long history in sectors such as oil and gas.

“To realise our national offshore wind deployment vision, HOM believes that learning from and working with the leading companies in these more advanced markets will develop and improve Japanese competence earlier.”

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