Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy (SGRE) recently announced the firm order to supply wind turbines for the 448 MW Neart na Gaoithe (NnG) offshore wind power project being developed by EDF Renewables in Scotland. The contract further cements SGRE’s market-leading position.
The company will install 54 of its SG 8.0-167 DD offshore turbines, with a 167-meter rotor diameter and 208-meter tip height. The installation of the unique Direct Drive technology turbines at Neart na Gaoithe will take the figure of DD offshore turbines comfortably beyond 2,000 turbines that SGRE has sold worldwide. The offshore wind-power plant is expected to be operational by 2023.
Neart na Gaoithe wind project, which means “Strength of the Wind,” continues a partnership with EDF Renewables that began with the Round 1 development of Teesside wind park in 2011. The 448-MW offshore wind power plant is 20 kilometers from the east coast of Scotland and close to the Port of Dundee where pre-assembly work will take place. This project will use 81 meter-long B81 blades produced on the re-modeled production lines of the SGRE factory in Hull.
The market-leading Direct Drive turbines provide additional capacity through fewer turbines, compared with the original consent given for the project for 75 turbines. When fully operational, it will generate electricity for about 375,000 homes, or all of the domestic properties in a city the size of Edinburgh, and displace 400,000 metric tons of CO2 annually.
“Receiving the firm order for the Neart na Gaoithe project from EDF Renewables U.K. is excellent news for Siemens Gamesa,” said Andreas Nauen, CEO of the Offshore Business Unit of Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy. “We’re fully prepared to deliver our reliable SGRE offshore Direct Drive technology and to doing our part to deliver clean energy to approximately 375,000 Scottish households when the project is in operation.”
The order comes in a year that saw the U.K. register a three-month period where renewable energy was the leading source of energy, outstripping fossil fuels for the first time. Additionally, more than half of Scotland’s energy consumption in 2019 was provided by renewable energy, while record-low prices were also recorded for clean energy, falling to just 39.50 pounds per MW/h.
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