The Anonymous Widower

Three Applications Submitted In Malta’s First Offshore Wind Tender

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

This is the sub-heading.

The Maltese government has received three submissions in the pre-qualification period for the country’s first offshore wind tender, which will award a concession for a floating wind project with an installed capacity of around 300 MW.

These first two paragraphs add more detail.

The Ministry for the Environment, Energy, and Public Cleanliness said on 22 July that the submission phase for the Preliminary Qualification Questionnaire (PQQ), launched in December 2024, had concluded, with three companies and consortia looking to participate in the process: Code Zero Consortium, led by SEP (Malta) Holding; Atlas Med Wind, a consortium led by Italy’s GreenIT SpA; and MCKEDRIK Sole Member, a sole applicant based in Greece.

In December last year, Malta opened the PQQ period, seeking to pre-qualify potential developers who will then be invited to participate in the next stage(s) of the tender to build Malta’s first floating wind farm. The project is planned to have an installed capacity of between 280 MW and 320 MW

Note.

  1. Despite being Malta’s first offshore wind farm, it will be a floating wind farm.
  2. It is a medium-sized wind farm, which will probably give the Maltese chances to supply some services.
  3. The consortia seem to have some local involvement.

Malta appears to be taking a sensible route.

I asked Google AI, what was Malta’s electricity generating capacity and got this reply.

Malta’s total electricity generation capacity is approximately 0.83 million kilowatts, according to TheGlobalEconomy.com. This value represents the latest data from 2023. The majority of this capacity comes from conventional power plants, with a smaller but growing contribution from renewable sources.

As 0.83 million kilowatts is 830 MW, these offshore wind farms could replace up to 36 % of Malta’s current generating capacity.

From my experience of the island Malta is not a bad place to live, so recruiting the specialist engineers, that are needed shouldn’t be a problem.

I can also see other small countries following a similar route to Malta.

July 23, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , | Leave a comment

The Power Of Buildings To Come

I took this picture on Bishopsgate in London.

It’s advertising the building, which is being built behind the hoarding called One Exchange Square.

July 23, 2025 Posted by | Energy, World | , , , | Leave a comment

Buses On London Route 141 Now Go In Convoy

I took these pictures at the Balls Pond Road stop on the route.

Sometimes you wait as long as twenty minutes for one to come along, but here were three in a similar number of minutes.

When I was at school, there were stories from the Second World War, when after a bus was hit by a German bomb, that buses on one route went in convoy for protection.

Perhaps, the buses are practicing for when Putin decides to attack London?

Or is it just another manifestation of the service on the worst bus route in London?

July 23, 2025 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

One Of The Five Large Buses Sold In Korea This Year Is Hydrogen-Powered

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in Pulse.

These are the first three paragraphs.

Nearly one in five large buses sold in South Korea in 2025 to date has been a hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV). In response, Hyundai Motor Co. is increasingly focusing on hydrogen-powered commercial transport amid sluggish demand for hydrogen-powered passenger cars.

According to data from the Korea Automobile & Mobility Association (KAMA) and Hyundai Motor, 380 hydrogen-powered buses were sold in the first five months of 2025, out of 1,923 large buses sold overall. The market share stood at 19.8 percent, indicating a significant increase from 6 percent in 2023 and 14.4 percent the previous year.

Analysts say hydrogen power is better suited for commercial vehicles than for passenger cars. While electric vehicles work well for lighter, smaller vehicles, hydrogen-powered systems offer key advantages for larger vehicles, including longer range, shorter refueling times, and greater payload capacity.

Korea and Germany certainly have more hydrogen-powered buses than the UK.

But then we are rather lagging behind other countries in the use of hydrogen. I am certainly writing fewer hydrogen stories since the change of government.

The Hindenberg has done a wonderful job, in convincing politicians that hydrogen is dangerous.

July 23, 2025 Posted by | Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment