Neart Na Gaoithe

Neart Na Gaoithe ("strength of the wind" in Gaelic, pronounced [ˈɲarʃd nə gɤ.jə]) is an offshore wind farm under construction in the outer Firth of Forth, 30 kilometres (19 mi) north of Torness. It has a potential capacity of 450 MW . It is being developed by Mainstream Renewable Power at a cost of £1.4bn.

Neart Na Gaoithe
CountryScotland
LocationFirth of Forth
Coordinates56°16′04″N 2°19′15″W
StatusUnder construction
Construction beganAugust 2020 (2020-08)
Owner(s)EDF Renewables ESB
Wind farm
TypeOffshore
Distance from shore20 km (12 mi)
Rotor diameter154 metres (505 ft)
Power generation
Make and modelSiemens SWT-8.0-167
Units planned54
Nameplate capacity450 MW

Planning

Mainstream Renewable Power was awarded exclusive rights to develop the wind farm in February 2009.[1] They proposed using 125 3.6MW turbines or 75 6MW turbines to achieve a total capacity of between 420 and 450 megawatts.[1] In 2011, surveyors conducting a detailed preparatory survey of the sea floor published sonar images of the wrecks of the two submarines – K-4 and K-17 – sunk during the Battle of May Island in 1918.[2]

A planning application was submitted in July 2012.[3] The developers said that the wind farm would occupy an area of around 65 square miles, would require between 64 and 125 turbines, and would have a rated capacity of 450MW.[3] The estimated cost was £1.4 billion.[3]

In February 2014 they confirmed that they would be using 75 Siemens SWT-6.0-154 turbines each with a 6 megawatt capacity.[4] A UK government contract was awarded in February 2015.[5] Construction was expected to begin in 2015,[6] but in January 2015 the RSPB submitted a legal challenge citing concerns over the impact on seabirds.[7] The case was heard at the Court of Session in Edinburgh in May 2015.[7] In May 2017 the same court overturned a July 2016 block of the project.[8][9][10] An RSPB appeal was denied in July 2017.[11]

The project was acquired in May 2018 by EDF and is expected to be commissioned in 2023.[12] In December 2018, permission was received from the Scottish government to reduce the number of turbines to 54 while maintaining the same overall capacity. Construction began in August 2020.[13] The wind farm should be operational by 2023.[14]

See also

References

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