The Anonymous Widower

Platform 17 At Clapham Junction Station

I took these pictures at Clapham Junction station this morning.

 

Note.

  1. The double-platform 1/2 is the main platform for the London Overground at Clapham Junction station.
  2. Platform 1 handles trains from Stratford station via the North and West London Lines
  3. Platfom 2 handles trains from Dalston Junction station via the East and South London Lines
  4. I arrived today in Platform 2 from Whitechapel station.
  5. Platform 17 is decidedly curved.
  6. Platform 16, which is used by trains going the other way, is also curved.
  7. Both Platform 16 and 17 have lifts to the station’s main overbridge.

Currently, some minor upgrade work is being carried out on the station.

The Platform Layout At Clapham Junction Station

This map from CartoMetro shows the platform layout at Clapham Junction.

Note.

  1. Mildmay services from Stratford on the North and West London Lines are shown in blue and terminate in Platform 1.
  2. Windrush services from Dalston Junction on the South London Line are shown in red and terminate in Platform 2.
  3. Platform 17 is the Southernmost of the platforms at Clapham Junction.

Platforms are more or less numbered 1 to 17 from North to South.

How Long Did It Take Me To Walk Between Platforms 1 And 17?

It took me five minutes this morning, but the bridge wasn’t crowded.

March 30, 2026 Posted by | Design, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

How To Carry A Suit On A London Overground Train

I took this picture this morning on a London Overground train.

I’ve never ever seen anybody do this before.

But, I suppose it is fairly logical.

I would expect it would work on other trains, like the Underground.

March 30, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Mersey Ferry To Be Decommissioned After 67 Years

The title of this post is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

A “much-loved” ferry that has crossed the River Mersey for 67 years is being decommissioned.

These three paragraphs add more details.

Mersey Ferries confirmed The Royal Iris of the Mersey is to be replaced by the new £26m Royal Daffodil later this year.

From its launch in Devon in 1959 until a major refurbishment in 2001, The Royal Iris was named Mountwood. She was renamed on her return to service in 2002, following a major revamp.

Mersey Ferries said it was considering how best to mark her farewell “with further details to be confirmed in due course”.

When I was a student at Liverpool University, it was named Mountwood and I used it regularly.

This is a video of the ferry, that I found on Youtube.

I have a thought.

Is There Any Other Public Transport, That I Have Used Recently, That Was Built In 1957?

I can’t think of anything, except the occasional Routemaster bus.

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

UK To Launch Next CfD Allocation Round In July

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The UK government has announced that the next Contracts for Difference (CfD) allocation round will open in July 2026.

Contracts for Difference Allocation Round 7 did well and according to Google AI raised these contracts.

Contracts for Difference (CfD) Allocation Round 7 (AR7) results, announced in January 2026, secured a record 8.4 GW of offshore wind capacity, enough to power 12 million homes. The auction awarded contracts to 6.865 GW of fixed-bottom offshore wind and 192.5 MW of floating wind, with strike prices around £91/MWh (2024 prices).

Key Results of AR7:

Capacity Secured: Over 8.4 GW (8,437.5 MW) of offshore wind, with 6,090 MW in England, 1,380 MW in Scotland, and 775 MW in Wales.

Key Winners: RWE secured nearly 6.9 GW across four projects, including Dogger Bank South and Norfolk Vanguard; SSE Renewables secured 1,380 MW for Berwick Bank Phase B; and floating wind projects included Pentland and Erebus.

Strike Prices: Fixed-bottom offshore wind cleared at £91.20/MWh (£89.49/MWh in Scotland), while floating offshore wind cleared at £216.49/MWh.

Investment & Jobs: The projects represent over £22 billion in private investment and support approximately 7,000 jobs.

Timeline: The projects are expected to start delivering power from 2028 onwards.

Out of curiosity, I asked Google AI, “How Many GWs Are Expected To Be Signed Up In The UK’s CfD Round 8” and received this answer.

Allocation Round 8 (AR8) of the UK’s Contracts for Difference (CfD) scheme is expected to launch in July 2026. While specific, finalized GW targets for the winning bids have not yet been announced, the government is adapting the auction to support increasingly large projects, including potential floating offshore wind farms of 1GW+.

Following the record-breaking AR7, which secured 8.4 GW of offshore wind capacity in January 2026, AR8 is expected to focus on continuing this momentum to meet the UK’s “Clean Power 2030” objectives.

Key context regarding expected AR8 capacity includes:

Growing Project Scale: The AR8 consultation indicates that upcoming floating offshore wind projects are likely to be much larger (potentially 1GW+) than previously expected, prompting changes to the scheme to support this scale.

Targeted Procurement: Industry sources previously indicated that the combination of AR7 and AR8 was expected to secure significant capacity to meet 2030 goals, with over 20 GW of offshore wind previously identified as eligible for upcoming rounds.

Supply Chain Focus: The government has issued, or is planning, Supply Chain Plan requirements for solar projects of 300 megawatts or more and for onshore wind, indicating high volumes are anticipated in these sectors.

The application window for AR8’s Clean Industry Bonus is currently planned for May 2026, with the main auction following in July 2026.

Conclusion

It doesn’t really indicate a figure for AR8, but does indicate that AR7 and AR8 together have a joint target of over 20 GW.

  1. I can do a small calculation.
  2. AR7 secured 8.4 GW of offshore wind capacity in January 2026.
  3. As AR7+AR8 are expected to secure 20 GW before 2030, that means AR8 will secure  11.6 GW.

So this means that AR8 could be 38 % bigger than AR7.

 

 

 

 

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Energy | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Vestas Unveils Plans For V236-15.0 MW Nacelle Factory In Scotland

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Vestas plans to build a nacelle and hub assembly facility in Scotland to support offshore wind projects in the UK and across Europe.

These four paragraphs give what looks to be a full outline of a more or less comprehensive plan.

The proposed factory would require a capital investment of more than EUR 250 million and is planned to manufacture nacelles and hubs for the company’s V236-15.0 MW offshore wind turbine. The new facility is expected to create up to 500 direct jobs, with additional employment across the supply chain.

According to Vestas, the plan to set up the factory follows the results of the Contracts for Difference Allocation Round 7 (AR7) in January 2026, the company’s growing offshore wind order book in the UK, and strategic discussions with the UK and Scottish governments on the next steps to develop and co-invest in the facility.

The plan also includes the potential co-location of suppliers producing other major turbine components, as part of a broader manufacturing setup.

The final investment decision (FID) on the new factory will depend on Vestas securing sufficient UK-based orders for the AR7 projects and those from the upcoming AR8. Subject to the timing of those results and the planning process, the facility could begin production by 2029 or 2030, Vestas said on 25 March.

  • V236-15.0 turbines are 15 MW turbines, for which Vestas have 256 orders in the UK for Inchcape, Norfolk Vanguard East and Norfolk Vanguard West.
  • In addition to new wind farms, will these large turbines be used for refitting to older wind farms?
  • If other manufacturers or components could be involved, this would surely be sensible.

The picture in the original article shows the large size of these nacelles, which would suggest a site with good access to water might be good to ease transport.

Did The Help For Steel, Six Days Ago Help?

On the 19th March, I wrote UK Steel Industry Backed By Major New Trade Measure And Strategy. Did this help for steel to formulate Vestas’s plans? I wouldn’t be surprised, if the steel can be taken to the site Vesta chooses by rail or water.

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Energy, Finance & Investment, Manufacturing | , , , , , | 1 Comment

We Live Three Minutes From The Station — And Can’t Catch A Train

The title of this post is the same as that of this article on The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

A line connecting Oxford to Milton Keynes was finished 16 months ago. So why does it remain useless to families who moved to be next to it?

These four paragraphs add more details.

Nearly two years after moving to Winslow for its rail connections, Rachael Lee is still waiting to catch her first train.

Winslow station, a three-minute walk from Lee’s house, should have opened last year, connecting locals to Oxford, Milton Keynes and beyond. But as the site remains plagued by delays, the only people to pass through its doors are the security guards paid to keep watch.

“All the lights are on and there’s ticket machines that are on,” said Lee, 36, a marketing professional who moved to the Buckinghamshire town with her family in June 2024. “Who’s paying for all of that? It just feels like it takes the mickey when you drive and walk past it.”

Construction issues, union disputes about onboard guards and a lack of ready trains have all delayed the opening of the station, which was built for East West Rail (EWR) in a £6 billion government-funded project to reconnect Oxford and Cambridge by train for the first time since 1967. It is one of the country’s biggest rail projects, begun in 2014, and is expected to bring tens of thousands of jobs and billions of pounds to the regional economy.

Harold Wilson would have solved this problem with beer and sandwiches at No. 10.

 

 

 

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 2 Comments

Olympia Partners With TfL To Boost Peak-Time Mildmay Line Services

The title of this post, is the same as that as this press release from Transport for London.

These two bullet points act as sub-headings.

  • Olympia, London’s newest entertainment destination, is funding 16 extra peak‑time services per weekday, providing increased capacity to support rising demand on this part of the Mildmay line as well as reducing customer journey times 
  • The additional shuttle services will depart from Clapham Junction Platform 17, with three services in the morning peak and five in the evening peak

These two paragraphs add more details.

Customers will benefit from easier access to the transformed Olympia, set to become London’s newest destination for entertainment, culture and hospitality, as well as Westfield London and improved links to other TfL services

Customers will benefit from more frequent services between Clapham Junction and Shepherd’s Bush from Monday 18 May, as Transport for London (TfL) introduces additional peak weekday shuttle services on the Mildmay line.

This map from CartoMetro shows how trains will get to Platform 17 at Clapham Junction.

Note.

  1. Mildmay services from Stratford on the North and West London Lines are shown in blue and terminate in Platform 1.
  2. Windrush services from Dalston Junction on the South London Line are shown in red and terminate in Platform 2.
  3. Platform 17 is the Southernmost of the platforms at Clapham Junction.

The new services will take the same route as Southern’s Watford Junction and East Croydon service through Clapham Junction.

  • Trains will go through Imperial Wharf station and Latchmere 2 Junction.
  • They will then take Latchmere 1 Junction and pass under the lines to get to Platform 17.
  • There is a crossover between the two tracks, so that trains can get on the left-hand track.

This second CartoMetro map shows Platforms 16 and 17 to a larger scale.

Note.

  1. Platform 17 doesn’t look very long, but it is 172 metres.
  2. Five-car Class 378 trains are 101.35 metres, so should fit.
  3. The crossover, that will be used by returning shuttle trains is clearly visible in the top-right corner.

It does appear though that there will need to be no major trackwork needed for the new service.

I do have one thought.

Will Clapham Junction Station Get A Platform 0?

This was proposed in Will Clapham Junction Station Get A Platform 0?, but  there is no mention of it in the press release, although Michael Volkert, who is CEO of Olympia estates does say this.

The new train services will depart from platform 17 at Clapham Junction. Existing services to Stratford will continue to operate from Platform 1. For the latest travel information customer should check TfL Go, Journey Planner on the TfL website or station departure screens.

Commuters will have to hone their ducking and diving skills.

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 4 Comments

Northern Offers Free Travel To Bedlington Terrier Owners When Town’s New Station Opens

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Rail magazine.

These two paragraphs add more details.

Passengers with a famous breed of dog named after Bedlington will be offered free travel when the town’s new station is open. It is the sixth and final new station on the Northumberland Line, which reopened to passengers in December 2024 – for the first time in 60 years.

Around 1.3 million journeys have been made on the route so far, with passengers travelling for work, education, important appointments and fun days out. When the station opens on Sunday, 29 March, it will allow customers to travel into Newcastle in around 30 minutes, with an off-peak single costing just £2.60.

I don’t own a dog anymore, let alone a bedlington terrier, but I had intended to go to the opening of the new Bedlington station tomorrow, but there don’t seem to be any trains between London and Newcastle due to engineering works.

So, it looks like I’ll have to miss out!

March 28, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Port Talbot To Become Offshore Wind Hub For Celtic Sea

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

Port Talbot will become the first dedicated hub for floating offshore wind in the Celtic Sea.

These four introductory paragraphs add some detail.

Associated British Ports (ABP) will begin detailed design and engineering work on new port infrastructure after securing grant funding of up to £64m from the UK government.

The project will support the assembly and deployment of floating turbines that will operate in deeper waters off the Welsh coast. ABP said the development could support thousands of jobs and attract hundreds of millions of pounds in further investment.

The UK government said the new port would help deliver clean, homegrown electricity, protect households from volatile fossil fuel markets and create up to 5,000 new jobs.

Redeveloping the port to handle the assembly of wind turbines could position Port Talbot at the centre of a fast-growing clean energy sector.

I have some thoughts.

How Much Wind Power Is Planned For The Western Approaches?

In Ocean Winds Enters Lease Agreement With Crown Estate For 1.5 GW Celtic Sea Floating Wind Project, I published this Google AI estimate of the wind power, that could be developed in the Western Approaches.

How Much Wind Power Is Planned For The Western Approaches?

I asked Google AI, the title of this section and received this answer.

The UK has a target of 50 GW of offshore wind by 2030, with significant projects planned for the Celtic Sea (part of the Western Approaches), which is a key area for 5 GW of floating wind. Total UK offshore wind pipeline capacity exceeds 93 GW, with major developments in this region focusing on floating technology.

Key details regarding wind power in the Western Approaches (specifically the Celtic Sea) include:

Celtic Sea Developments: The area is a primary focus for floating wind projects, designed to capitalize on deep-water potential, with 5 GW of floating wind expected to be deployed across the UK by 2030.

Pipeline and Capacity: The total UK pipeline for offshore wind, which includes the Western Approaches, is 93 GW, and the government is aiming for 43-50 GW of installed offshore capacity by 2030.

Project Status: The region is expected to benefit from the Crown Estate’s leasing rounds aimed at accelerating floating wind, with 15.4 GW of new projects submitted across the UK in 2024.

Wales/South West England Context: Wales has 1.4 GW of projects in the pre-application stage, with some potential for developments off the South West coast.

For more detailed information on specific projects and their development status, you can visit the RenewableUK website and RenewableUK website.

It looks like about 20 GW of offshore wind could be installed in the Western Approaches.

I would expect, a lot of work will be generated in the Port Talbot area.

A Lot Of Steel Will Be Needed

Earlier in the weeek, the UK Government backed the steel industry in Port Talbot, with a press release entitled UK Steel Industry Backed By Major New Trade Measure And Strategy.

Port Talbot Is A Comprehensive, Well-Connected Site

This Google Map shows the site.

Note.

  1. The M4 running along the site.
  2. The South Wales Main Line running along the site, with Port Talbot Parkway serving the site.
  3. The harbour by the station.
  4. The Tata steelworks marked by the red arrow.

I hope the up to £64 million grant from the government is sufficient for Associated British Ports (ABP) to turn the harbour into a world-class floating wind facility and that the Treasury haven’t been too mean.

BW Ideol, ABP To Explore Serial Production Of Floating Wind Foundations At Port Talbot

I wrote a post with this name in December 2023, before the leases for the Celtic Sea windfarms had been awarded. As one has been awarded to EDf Renewables, BW Ideol seem to have made a good move.

BW Ideol have a web page, which describes their concrete floating wind foundations manufacturing line.

I hope South Wales has got enough concrete?

 

March 27, 2026 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Energy, Manufacturing | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

UK Continues Offshore Wind Expansion With 6 GW Leasing Round Planned For Early 2027

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The Crown Estate has unveiled plans for the UK’s Offshore Wind Leasing Round 6 to be held in the first half of 2027, targeting the development of at least 6 GW of new capacity.

These three paragraphs add some details.

The upcoming leasing process will focus on areas primarily located in the northeast of England. The sites are expected to be suitable for fixed-bottom offshore wind projects and will be brought forward following market and stakeholder engagement, including the National Energy System Operator’s (NESO) strategic plans for energy and for electricity networks, which will inform the exact capacity of the upcoming leasing round and refine specific site details and locations.

The Crown Estate said on 26 March that it had begun a programme of market engagement ahead of the official launch of a new leasing round, and is seeking market views on commercial approaches to the leasing round “to understand the potential viability and market appetite.”

The UK seabed manager said that it had also identified other areas of seabed opportunity across the South West, Wales and other regions which may form the basis of subsequent leasing rounds through the Crown Estate’s new seabed management tool, the Marine Delivery Routemap, which is being used for the first time in Round 6.

In Renewable Power By 2030 In The UK, I calculated how much offshore wind could be commissioned up to 2030.

These were my results.

This gives these yearly totals, if I use pessimistic dates.

  • 2025 – 1,235 MW
  • 2026 – 4,807 MW
  • 2027 – 5,350 MW
  • 2028 – 4,998 MW
  • 2029 – 9,631 MW
  • 2030 – 15,263 MW

This adds up to a total of 58,897 MW.

But This Doesn’t Include Round 5 Or Round 6!

But the article on offshoreWIND.biz does, say this about Round 5.

The Crown Estate’s previous leasing round, Round 5, focused on floating offshore wind in the Celtic Sea, covering areas off South Wales and South West England and targeting up to 4.5 GW of capacity. The round awarded seabed rights to Equinor, Gwynt Glas, and Ocean Winds, with individual project development areas of up to 1.5 GW. Agreements for lease were recently signed for all three Round 5 sites.

The article also indicates that 6 GW can be expected from Round 6.

Which gives a total of 69,397 MW or 69.4 GW.

No wonder the UK Government can back the steel industry, with press releases like this UK Steel Industry Backed By Major New Trade Measure And Strategy.

Lots of renewable energy, is the new rich!

March 27, 2026 Posted by | Energy, Manufacturing | , , , , , | 1 Comment