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Major offshore wind farm planned off Louth, Ireland in the North Irish Sea 

A major offshore wind farm is at an advanced stage of planning for the North Irish Sea. The wind farm will have capacity to generate 330 megawatts of electricity. On completion, it would be Ireland’s largest renewable electricity generator and one of the largest power stations in the country. The project is being developed by an Irish renewable energy company, Oriel Windfarm Limited, and is located in the Irish Sea between Dundalk and Drogheda.

Preparatory work on the project has been underway for several years under the terms of a Foreshore Licence granted to Oriel in 2005. It is currently in the final stages of a Foreshore Lease application process with the Department of Communications, Marine and Natural Resources. Detailed plans were submitted to the Department in February of this year. A public consultation process was completed in June. A decision on the Foreshore Lease, which would allow the project to proceed to construction, is due in the autumn.

On completion, the wind farm will have capacity to generate in excess of 5 per cent of Ireland’s electricity needs, producing enough electricity for 250,000 homes. It would reduce the Government’s carbon emission liabilities, reduce national dependence on fossil fuel burning power stations and enhance security of supply by reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels. Based on figures supplied by Sustainable Energy Ireland, the Oriel wind farm has the potential to avert the release of over 350,000 tonnes of Co2 per annum.

Oriel Windfarm is a privately owned sustainable and renewable energy company established to develop wind farms in Ireland. The project is headed up by Brian Britton, a Dundalk based management consultant, who is Managing Director of Oriel. The company is backed by business, professional and wind farm interests with proven track records in the sector. To date, Oriel has invested over €7 million in bringing the project to the development stage.

The site of the proposed wind farm is 22km south east of Dundalk and 24km north east of Drogheda. If all the relevant consents are obtained, construction could commence as early as Autumn 2009. It will comprise fifty five turbines producing up to 6MW of electricity each and will be constructed in five phases of eleven turbines each. Oriel expects to commence supplying electricity to the national grid within two years of commencement of construction. The entire development could be completed by 2013.

Total construction costs are estimated to be €623m. During the construction phase, over 200 construction jobs, as well as 40 professional and managerial jobs, will be created. During the operation and maintenance phases 16 jobs will be created in the initial phase and 40 jobs in the lifetime of the project. Other benefits will also accrue to the North East, in areas such as the National Renewable Energy Centre at the Dundalk Institute of Technology.

The next stage of the project, assuming the granting of a Foreshore Lease, will be grid connection and turbine supply. Oriel said that it is already well advanced in the preparation of a grid connection application. The position on turbines is that there is currently an international shortage. This has created opportunities for new suppliers to enter Irish and international markets.

By Finfacts Team
Aug 1, 2007, 15:21

finfacts.com

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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