Another Significant Milestone For Scotland’s Largest Offshore Wind Farm; 4800 Tonnes Platform Completed

0
180

Reading Time: 1 minutes

Scotland’s largest fixed bottom offshore wind farm and the world’s deepest, Seagreen, currently under construction off the Angus coast, has passed another significant milestone with the successful installation of the 4,800 tonnes offshore platform topside.

The topside forms the backbone of the offshore wind farm. At 40 metres long, 45 metres wide and 15 metres high, the heavyweight superstructure’s role is to collect and manage 1,075MW of power generated by the 114 Vestas wind turbines before transferring it ashore via around 60km of offshore subsea cabling.

Once onshore, the electricity continues to the new Tealing substation near Dundee via a further 19km of cabling for onward distribution to homes and businesses via the national electricity network.

The topside was lifted from a heavy transport vessel and on to the previously installed 6-legged jacket foundation. The completed structure sits in water depths of around 55m and will be one of the largest AC platforms in UK waters.

ALSO READ  ACP's Response to Record of Decision for New England 1 and 2 Offshore Wind Projects

Specialist cable installation and support vessels will continue to install the onsite inter-array network of cables to the turbines and to the offshore platform. Another vessel is currently installing the export cable from the landfall point at Carnoustie.

“Once again, the many years of careful design and planning have come to fruition with the arrival and successful installation of one of the UK’s largest offshore AC platforms, serving what will become Scotland’s largest offshore wind farm,” Said John Hill, Director of the Seagreen Wind Farm Project.

The Seagreen Wind Farm is scheduled to enter operation in early 2023. At 1.1GW, the wind farm will be capable of generating around 5,000 GWh of renewable energy annually which is enough clean and sustainable electricity to power more than 1.6m UK homes.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.