The Anonymous Widower

Project To Demonstrate 15+ MW Turbine On Ocergy’s Floating Platform Kicks Off

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

This is the sub-heading.

The Reduced Commercial Risks with Demo of 15+ MW (RECORD15) joint industry project, which aims to install a latest generation turbine with a rated power over 15 MW on Ocergy’s floating platform in 2028, has been launched

The visualisation of the 15 MW turbine on its float in the article is impressive.

These two paragraphs add more details.

The Front-End Engineering Design (FEED) contract for this pilot project was recently signed between Ocergy and three offshore wind developers: EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG, Kyuden Mirai Energy, and TEPCO Renewable Power.

Ocergy’s platform, the turbine agnostic OCG-Wind, is a modular design supporting an optimised assembly process from pre-fabricated steel sub-assemblies, allowing serial production using today’s existing supply chain and infrastructure, said the company.

Note.

  • The average size of onshore wind turbine in the UK is 1.6 MW.
  • Whitelee wind farm in Scotland, which is the largest onshore wind farm in the UK, uses 215 x 2.5 MW turbines.
  • The Dogger Bank wind farm used 13 and 14 MW turbines on fixed foundations.

A 15+ MW turbine on a floating foundation will surely give Ocergy’s technology a very good test.

But it will be needed.

This is the overview of the Bowdun wind farm in Scotland, taken from the project’s web site.

The Bowdun Offshore Wind Farm will be located in the E3 leasing zone, which lies 44km off the coast of Aberdeenshire.

The zone, awarded to TWP under the ScotWind leasing round in January 2022, covers an area of 187km.

With water depths below 70m, it is highly suitable for fixed-foundation turbines, which will most likely sit on jacket foundations.

TWP plans to develop a 1GW offshore wind farm at the site. The base case is that the farm will number between 40-60 turbines, using ‘next-generation’ models with a capacity
between 18 MW and 25 MW. Construction is anticipated to commence in 2029 with commissioning planned for 2032-2033.

This project base case will evolve as we gain knowledge from our site investigations and conduct technology research.

If turbines between 18 MW and 25 MW are to be used on fixed foundations, I can see a need to develop floats that will handle them.

June 23, 2025 Posted by | Design, Energy | , , , , | Leave a comment

Octopus Energy Invests In Floating Offshore Wind Tech Company

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

This is the sub-heading.

Octopus Energy’s generation arm has invested in US-headquartered Ocergy to boost the development of floating offshore wind farms globally.

These are the first three paragraphs.

According to Octopus, Ocergy has an innovative approach to designing and manufacturing floating foundations, reducing the time and cost of building them.

Ocergy is pioneering a hyper-local supply chain approach, working with local manufacturers and creating green jobs in the areas where the wind turbines are installed, said the company.

Further efficiencies are unlocked through Ocergy’s lighter and modular designs which make the turbine foundations easy to transport and assemble at their final destination, according to the press release.

This page on the Ocergy web site contains the press release, mentioned in the article.

These are some sentences from the press release.

  • Ocergy, which is headquartered in the US and has operations in France, is pioneering a hyper-local supply chain approach, working with local manufacturers and creating green jobs in the areas where the turbines are installed.
  • Further efficiencies are unlocked through Ocergy’s lighter and modular designs which make the turbine foundations easy to transport and assemble at their final destination.
  • Floating foundations are used in areas with coastlines that are too deep for foundations that are fixed to the seabed. Around 80% of global offshore wind resources are located in deep waters, underscoring this technology’s vast untapped potential.
  • It comes as governments across the globe have set ambitious targets for floating offshore wind. The UK alone is targeting 5 GW of floating offshore wind capacity by 2030.

I certainly like their approach.

believe that innovative designs and streamlined manufacturing will play a large part in installing the large amount of floating wind, that is planned by governments worldwide.

I also believe that because of the repetitive nature of the building of these floating structures, innovative project management software and systems will be developed.

I certainly have my own ideas for that!

May 1, 2024 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ocergy Floaters Selected For 100 MW Project Off Scotland

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Splash247.com.

These two paragraphs outline Ocergy’s OCG-Wind foundation technology.

The Salamander floating offshore wind project, a joint venture between Simply Blue Group, Ørsted and Subsea 7, has awarded the pre-FEED (front-end engineering design) deal to Ocergy for its OCG-Wind foundation technology.

The US-based Ocergy has developed a novel semisub floater called OCG-Wind, to support turbines larger than 10 MW, designed for the development of large-scale wind farms. It is targeting a levelised cost of energy (LCOE) that can start to drive reductions in floating offshore wind farms to eventually be competitive with fixed offshore wind farms.

Note.

  1. There is a picture showing two turbines on OCG-Wind floats.
  2. Salamander is intended to be an INTOG project of 100 MW.
  3. The floaters are expected to be fabricated at Global Energy Group’s Port of Nigg.
  4. ERM’s Dolphyn electrolysis, desalination and hydrogen production concept is also planned for the project.

The Salamander project is certainly going for a lot of innovation.

October 31, 2022 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment