The Anonymous Widower

Able Seaton Port

Able Seaton Port has been in the news several time recently. So I looked it up on Google Maps.

These four paragraphs on the Able Seaton Port website outline the capabilities of the port.

ABLE Seaton Port (ASP) is located in the centre of the UK on the North East Coast close to the mouth of the River Tees and covers 51 hectares (126 acres) including a 10 hectare (25 acre) dry dock (currently wet) – one of the world’s largest.

It is capable of handling all types of offshore construction vessels, has significant crane capacity and quays, which have been constructed particularly to suit the requirements of the heavy fabrication industry.

Quays 10 & 11 are some of the strongest in Europe at 306m long. They are dredged to -15m chart datum and are designed with a quay loading capacity of 40T/m² with a heavy load-out pad area capable of 60T/m².

Quay 6 is a new heavy-lift quay at the northern end of the wet dock. At 60T/m² this is one of the heaviest load out quays in Europe. It’s function is to service the Brent field decommissioning project which ABLE is undertaking with partners Shell and Allseas.

Note.

The four platforms with their helipads.

Is the platform at the Northern end of the dock concerned with the Brent field decommissioning project?

There seems to be lots of components around the dock ready to be assembled into assemblies like wind turbine foundations.

As Able say this is certainly a large facility.

This second Google Map is a 3D-visualisation of the Southern three platforms.

The view has all changed now according to this news item on the Able Seaton Port, which is entitled First Campaign To Install Turbines At World’s Largest Offshore Wind Farm Is Underway.

A new vessel called Voltaire will be used to install the turbines.

This page on the Dogger Bank Wind Farm web site, is entitled Largest Jack-Up Vessel Voltaire Arrives In The UK To Build Largest Wind Farm In The World.

These are the bullet points.

  • Largest offshore jack-up vessel and first seaworthy ultra-low emission installation vessel Voltaire arrives in the UK for her very first assignment on Dogger Bank Wind Farm.
  • The vessel will install turbines for all three Dogger Bank Wind Farm phases, a total of 277 units of GE Renewable Energy Haliade-X offshore wind turbines.

These three paragraphs describe the assembly of the wind farm.

The largest offshore jack-up installation vessel ever built, Voltaire, has just arrived in the UK port of Able Seaton ahead of its first campaign on Dogger Bank Wind Farm.

Voltaire of Jan De Nul Group was delivered in late 2022. Since then she has been undertaking final preparations for her very first assignment, the construction of the Dogger Bank Wind Farm phases A, B and C.

In total, the vessel will be responsible for installing 277 GE Renewable Energy Haliade-X turbines. Voltaire will sail out in early July to begin installation

As in an earlier life I was writing project management software for North Sea oil and gas, I can obviously say history is repeating itself. In the 1970s offshore work got easier as cranes got bigger  and now fifty years later, it looks like larger lifting capacity, is enabling the installation of larger turbines.

August 7, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , | Leave a comment

Battery Train Deployment Report Commissioned

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

This is the first paragraph.

The Rail Safety & Standards Board has commissioned consultancy WSP to produce evidence-based recommendations for optimising and standardising the adoption of battery-powered trains.

Note.

  1. The train shown in the picture in the article is a Stadler FLIRT Akku.
  2. WSP are a well-respected Canadian engineering consultancy.

To commission a development report sounds to be a sensible act.

August 7, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 8 Comments

Progress In Front Of Moorgate Station – 7th August 2023

The pedestrian area in front of the Elizabeth Line entrance at Moorgate station is progressing and I took these pictures this morning.

Note.

  1. The tree-like sculpture is Manifold (Major Third) 5:4, is by Conrad Shawcross, which I showed being installed in An Art Installation In Front Of Moorgate Station.
  2. The pedestrian area will be protected by the City of London’s distinctive bollards.
  3. Only two of the bollards have been painted in their final colours.
  4. In No Budget; Employ Students, I talked about how the City of London has form in using art students to do decorative paintwork.

The UK is certainly going for appropriately-sized pedestrian areas in front of stations to allow travellers to get easily clear at busy times.

August 7, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Funny Turn On Friday

Thursday, 3rd August

I’d slept with the window open, as I often do and woke up to a very damp bedroom. I suspect, that I’d had a similar incident to the one in My Strange Skin.

I measured my INR at 0800 and it was 2.4.

I had my usual bath and breakfast in Leon on Moorgate.

Afterwards, I just went home and added to this blog.

One thing I noticed was that my left leg was going dead, as I sat on the chair typing. but then that happens regularly. It was similarly to the incident in Saved By A Beer?.

Later I had a tremendous itch in my left foot which I treated with copious amounts of the Body Shop’s Hemp Foot Protector.

Friday, 4th August

I had intended to go to the section of the city wall, that has been put on display at City Wall At Vine Street.

But as I was bumping into people and street furniture, I thought there might be something wrong, so I diverted to the A & E at the Royal London Hospital. I was also dropping my brief-case, when I held it in my left hand.

After various tests, including a CT-Scan, I finally left at 21:30, after they’d found nothing serious.

They measured by INR and they said it was 1.9. As I’d not eaten or drunk, large amounts of food and drink, that would drop my INR, how did it drop by 0.5 in 24 hours?

I went home on the Overground and a bus.

Saturday, 5th August

I wasn’t feeling unwell at all.

I was in all day watching the sport.

I was drinking a lot. Perhaps it was 4-5 mugs of tea and a 500 ml. bottle of Adnams 0.5 % Ghost Ship.

Sunday, 6th August

Very much like Saturday, except that I had lunch with my granddaughter.

I had two bottles of 0.5 % beer.

Monday, 7th August

I measured my INR at 0800 and it was 2.8.

August 7, 2023 Posted by | Health | , , , | 2 Comments