The Anonymous Widower

Ørsted Receives Development Consent For 2.6 GW Hornsea Four Offshore Wind Farm

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

This is the sub-heading.

The UK Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero has granted development consent to Hornsea Project Four, a 2.6 GW offshore wind farm Ørsted plans to build some 69 kilometres off the Yorkshire Coast.

This is the first paragraph.

The UK government, in a press release issued on 12 July, stated that Hornsea Four was the 126th Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project and 73rd energy application to have been examined by The Planning Inspectorate within the timescales laid down in the Planning Act 2008.

It certainly looks like The Planning Inspectorate has been working overtime.

Note that the four Hornsea wind farms are planned to have at least the following sizes.

  • Hornsea 1 – 1218 MW
  • Hornsea 2 – 1386 MW
  • Hornsea 3 – 2852 MW
  • Hornsea 4 – 2600 MW

These four wind farms give the Hornsea complex, a total capacity of at least 8056 MW.

When I worked at ICI in Runcorn in the late 1960s, I used to cross the Runcorn Bridge twice every day and would see Fiddlers Ferry power station, with its eight cooling towers, on the North Bank of the River Mersey to the East. It was generally thought of as a large coal-fired power station.

These pictures of Fiddlers Ferry power station were taken in 2021, from a Liverpool-bound train on the railway bridge.

This Google Map shows the power station.

Note.

  1. Fiddlers Ferry may have been large for its time at 1989 MW, but it is still less than a quarter of the size of the Hornsea wind farm!
  2. Drax power station in 1986 at 3960 MW, was larger than Fiddlers Ferry, but was still less than half of the size of Hornsea!

Hornsea wind farm is a true green giant!

This paragraph is from the Hornsea Project 4 section of the Wikipedia entry for the Hornsea wind farms.

Construction of the wind farm was provisionally expected to start in 2023, and be operational by 2027, at the earliest. The project’s capacity is unknown by Ørsted due to the ever increasing size of available wind turbines for the project.

When completed, it could be even bigger.

 

 

 

 

July 13, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Bradford Railway Station: Axed Plans For New Travel Hub Reconsidered

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

This is the sub-heading.

Plans for a new railway station in Bradford will be reconsidered after the government previously scrapped them.

These paragraphs outline how the government has changed its mind.

Former Transport Secretary Grant Shapps cancelled the plan for Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR), a brand new line serving the city, in November 2021.

The government has said an updated business case for the project was expected later this year.

West Yorkshire Mayor Tracy Brabin welcomed the news but criticised the “dither and delay”.

When the Integrated Rail Plan (IRP) was unveiled in 2021, it included cutting much of HS2’s eastern leg and scaling back NPR, including plans for a new station and line in Bradford.

The announcement that the government would now reconsider plans was made in the Department for Transport’s (DfT) response to the Transport Select Committee’s report on the IRP.

The committee had argued that the department had not properly tested alternative options to its proposals and had left out analysis of wider economic “levelling up” impacts of different options for NPR.

But there are no details yet.

Do We Know Anything?

The new station has been proposed to be built on the site of the current St. James Wholesale Market In Bradford.

This OpenRailwayMap shows the route of the railway between Leeds and Bradford Interchange stations, which runs via New Pudsey station.

Note.

  1. Leeds is to the East.
  2. Bradford Interchange station is in the North-West corner of the map.
  3. The yellow line across the map is the railway between Leeds and Bradford Interchange stations.
  4. St. James Wholesale Market is the rectangular building towards the top of the map in the middle.
  5. The dotted line going through the market is a disused goods line.

It is not obvious how the station will be connected to the rail network.

July 13, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 3 Comments

What’s Gone Wrong With Taskrabbit?

I’ve used Taskrabbit several times in the past and as I have a few electrical problems, I thought I’d see if they could help me.

The major problem, I have is a broken smoke detector, that won’t stop bleeping. As it is in my bedroom, I’m not getting a good night’s sleep.

This would be the sort of problem, I’d have fixed myself in the past, but as it’s above my bed, I don’t think I trust my balance to fix it, after my stroke.

I could always borrow a shot-gun and fix it for ever.

My trouble with Taskrabbit is that it doesn’t recognise my address and says it is out of their coverage area.

I have sent a message to Taskrabbit and they say to ring a US number, if they haven’t got back to me in two days.

That limit expired four hours ago.

It’s the worst customer service I’ve found in years.

July 13, 2023 Posted by | World | | 10 Comments

£20 Per Hour Is A 43 % Pay Increase Over £14 Per Hour

The BBC has just reported on the Junior Doctors Strike from outside University College Hospital.

  • Banners were showing that their current pay rate is £14 per hour.
  • In an interview, a strike leader said that junior doctors need an offer of £20 per hour.

That would be a pay increase of forty-three percent.

I’m sure we’d all like a pay or pension increase of that amount.

July 13, 2023 Posted by | Health, World | , , | 3 Comments