The Anonymous Widower

Poland Receives Its First Electricity from Offshore Wind As Baltic Power Starts Delivering

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

This is the sub-heading.

Electricity generated by the Baltic Power offshore wind farm has entered Poland’s national power grid, marking the first time the electricity generated by offshore wind turbines is added to the country’s energy mix.

This first paragraph gives more details of the project.

54 of 76 turbines have already been installed at Poland’s first offshore wind farm, with the first now generating electricity. Construction is scheduled for completion this autumn, ORLEN and Northland Power, the owners of the project, said.

When complete, the Baltic Power wind farm will generate up to 1.2 GW.

How Much Offshore Wind Does Poland Have Planned?

I asked Google AI, the question in the title of this section and received this reply.

 

Poland has massive offshore wind plans in the Baltic Sea.

The country targets 5.9 GW by 2030 and 18 GW by 2040. To meet these goals, the government is pursuing two primary development phases to transition the national grid away from coal.

A breakdown of Poland’s offshore wind rollout includes:

Phase I (Advanced Projects): Includes 5.9 GW of capacity.

Baltic Power: Poland’s first offshore wind farm (1.2 GW), developed by Orlen and Northland Power, officially connected to the national grid in July 2026.

Bałtyk 2 & 3: Equinor and Polenergia have finalized financing for an additional 1.4 GW, slated for commercial operation around 2028.

Phase II (Auction-Backed): Poland recently allocated over 3.4 GW in new capacity through competitive offshore wind auctions, pushing development well into the next decade.

Long-Term Outlook: Industry groups estimate the total technical potential in Poland’s portion of the Baltic Sea could reach up to 33 GW.

Will Poland Be Welcoming Any Invading Germany Wind Farms?

In New Study Shows How North Sea Offshore Wind Can Yield More While Costing Less, I talked about how Germany doesn’t have enough sea in which to place the wind farms it needs to generate the green electricity and hydrogen it needs.

This map from Wikipedia shows Exclusive Economic Zones in the North Sea, but it also shows who has control of the sea in the Baltic.

Note.

  1. Yellow is France.
  2. Mauve is Belgium, who drew the short straw.
  3. Light Blue is The Netherlands.
  4. Black is Germany, who despite their large land area, don’t have as much sea as the UK.
  5. Red is Denmark.
  6. Dark Blue is Norway.
  7. Green is The UK.
  8. Germany and Poland seen to share the Southern Baltic.

I wouldn’t be surprised to see Germany and Poland co-operating to maximize the wind power capacity of the Southern Baltic.

 

A Visit To Poland’s Coal Capital

On one of my trips to Poland, I went to Katowice, which is in Poland’s coal-mining region. I wrote about it in An Excursion In Katowice.

Google AI produced this snapshot of Katowice.

Katowice is historically known as the “Polish Coal Capital” and served as the absolute backbone of the region’s heavy industry. First transforming into an industrial powerhouse in the mid-19th century due to rich local coal and metal reserves, the city’s economy and rapid growth were entirely reliant on coal mining and steel.

While coal and heavy industry historically anchored its identity, the city of Katowice has aggressively transformed into a modern cultural, technological, and business hub. The wider Silesia region remains heavily tied to coal mining, but the municipality itself has shifted its focus to avoid reliance on it.

My visit to Katowice was an excellent pit-stop on a train ride between Krakow and Prague, when I did my Home Run From Krakow.

If you like your food and like me, you’re coeliac, I would certainly recommend Poland for a few days away.

Strangely, the language is not a problem, as if you get three Poles together, one will speak English better than what you do.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

July 10, 2026 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Energy, Food, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Irish ESB Joins Northland Power On Two Scottish Offshore Wind Projects

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

This is the sub-heading.

ESB will acquire a 24.5 per cent interest in Northland Power’s ScotWind projects, the fixed-bottom offshore wind farm Spiorad na Mara and the floating wind project Havbredey. Northland will retain 75.5 per cent in each project and continue to lead their development, construction, and operation

This is the first paragraph.

The companies have signed definitive agreements on ESB’s purchase of project stakes, with all commitments made prior to the agreements to remain in place.

Last month, I wrote ESB Invests In Floating Offshore Wind Mooring Tech. so are they in acquisitive mode?

This map from Cross Estate Scotland shows all the ScotWind contracts.

ESB now lrasr the following stakes in ScotWind.

Their details are as follows.

  • 14 – Havbredey – Floating – 1500 MW – 25 %
  • 16 – Spiorad na Mara – Fixed – 840 MW – 25 %
  • 20 – Unnamed – Floating – 500 MW – 100 %

These figures mean they lease about a GW.

I have my thoughts.

Will There Be A Multi-Purpose Interconnector between Ireland And Scotland?

Nothing has been mentioned yet, but could new wind farms om the future to the West of the Hebrides be connected to both the North of Scotland and the North of Ireland by a multi-purpose interconnector?

May 10, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment