Salamander wind farm project reaches vital next step

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If granted consent by Scottish Government and Local Authorities, Salamander will give the Scottish floating wind supply chain a major early capability development opportunity, supporting its scale-up ahead of the pipeline of projects leased under the ScotWind and INTOG seabed leasing rounds.

Salamander Offshore Wind Farm, a project being developed by the Salamander Wind Project Company Limited, a joint venture between Ørsted, Simply Blue Group and Subsea7, has submitted its consent applications for the onshore aspects of its proposed floating development, 35 kilometers off Peterhead on the East Coast of Scotland.

The applications outline Salamander’s plans for the onshore components of its proposed development. The first submission has been made to Aberdeenshire Council for the onshore substation and associated infrastructure and has been accepted. The second was to the Energy Consents Unit of the Scottish Government for the wind farm’s energy balancing infrastructure, which includes a battery storage that will help to balance the electricity grid.

This is a key step in the project’s timeline as the focus turn to the onshore elements of the development, which will generate enough green energy to power 100,000 Scottish homes if permitted.

“This project will generate a huge amount of energy for the country and presents key benefits to those in the local community and the supply chain,” said Hugh Yendole, Project Director for Salamander. “The opportunity is clear. The Scottish Government has the power to unlock the potential capability of floating offshore wind in our country and support Scotland becoming the global leader in floating offshore wind. The onshore applications present our plans for the onshore facilities required for our project. Both are key areas of our development and support our vision for green energy. At each stage we have encouraged and incorporated feedback from our stakeholders, and we will continue to work with them throughout the approval process.”

These applications follow on from the offshore consent applications which were submitted in April this year, which outlined the requirements for the offshore elements of the 100-MW project.

The Salamander project was a successful Innovation bidder in Crown Estate Scotland’s Innovation and Targeted Oil and Gas (INTOG) leasing round, signing an Exclusivity Agreement for a seabed lease in May last year. The INTOG round awarded Exclusivity Agreements to two types of projects — small scale innovation projects of less than 100 MW, and larger projects aiming to decarbonize oil and gas infrastructure. Salamander bid for and won an Exclusivity Agreement under the innovation category.

If granted consent by Scottish Government and Local Authorities, Salamander will give the Scottish floating wind supply chain a major early capability development opportunity, supporting its scale-up ahead of the pipeline of projects leased under the ScotWind and INTOG seabed leasing rounds.

MORE INFO  www.salamanderfloatingwind.com