The Anonymous Widower

Ørsted Pulls Plug On 2.4 GW Hornsea 4 Offshore Wind Project In UK

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

This is the sub-heading.

Ørsted has discontinued the development of the UK’s Hornsea 4 offshore wind farm in its current form. The developer said the 2.4 GW project has faced rising supply chain costs, higher interest rates, and increased construction and delivery risks since the Contract for Difference (CfD) award in Allocation Round 6 (AR6) in September 2024.

This introductory paragraph adds more detail.

In combination, these developments have increased the execution risk and deteriorated the value creation of the project, which led to Ørsted stopping further spending on the project at this time and terminating the project’s supply chain contracts, according to the Danish company. This means that the firm will not deliver Hornsea 4 under the CfD awarded in AR6.

Consider.

  • Hornsea 4 will be connected to the grid at a new Wanless Beck substation, which will also include a battery and solar farm, which will be South West of the current Creyke Beck substation. Are Ørsted frightened of opposition from the Nimbies to their plans?
  • I also wonder if political uncertainty in the UK, and the possibility of a Reform UK government, led by Nigel Farage is worrying companies like Ørsted.

So will factors like these prompt companies like Ørsted to move investment to countries, where they welcome wind turbines like Denmark, Germany and The Netherlands.

Could Ørsted Be Looking At An Alternative?

This is a map of wind farms in the North Sea in the Dogger Bank and Hornsea wind farms, that I clipped from Wikipedia..

These are the Dogger Bank and Hornsea wind farms and their developers and size

  • 37 – Dogger Bank A – SSE Renewables/Equinor – 1,235 MW
  • 39 – Dogger Bank B – SSE Renewables/Equinor – 1,235 MW
  • 38 – Dogger Bank C – SSE Renewables/Equinor – 1,218 MW
  • 40 – Sofia – RWE – 1,400 MW
  • 1 – Hornsea 1 – Ørsted/Global Infrstructure Partners – 1,218 MW
  • 32 – Hornsea 2 – Ørsted/Global Infrstructure Partners – 1,386 MW
  • 47 – Hornsea 3 – Ørsted – 2,852 MW
  • 51 – Hornsea 4 – Ørsted – 2,400 MW

Note.

  1. That is a total of 12, 944 MW, which is probably enough electricity to power all of England and a large part of Wales.
  2. Wikipedia’s List of offshore wind farms in the United Kingdom, also lists a 3,000 MW wind farm, that is being developed by German company ; RWE called Dogger Bank South,
  3. The Dogger Bank South wind farm is not shown on the map, but would surely be South of wind farms 37 to 40 and East of 51.
  4. The Dogger Bank South wind farm will raise the total of electricity in the Dogger Bank and Hornsea wind farms to just short of 16 GW.

Connecting 16 GW of new electricity into the grid, carrying it away to where it is needed and backing it up, so that power is provided, when the wind doesn’t blow, will not be a nightmare, it will be impossible.

An alternative plan is needed!

AquaVentus To The Rescue!

AquaVentus is a German plan to bring 10 GW of green hydrogen to the German mainland from the North Sea, so they can decarbonise German industry and retire their coal-fired power stations.

  • I introduce AquaVentus in AquaVentus, which I suggest you read.
  • AquaVentus is being developed by RWE.
  • AquaVentus connects to a German hydrogen network called H2ercules to actually distribute the hydrogen.

This video shows the structure of AquaVentus.

I clipped this map from the video.

Note.

  1. The thick white line running North-West/South-East is the spine of AquaVentus, that will deliver hydrogen to Germany.
  2. There is a link to Esbjerg in Denmark, that is marked DK.
  3. There appears to be an undeveloped link to Norway, which goes North,
  4. There appears to be an undeveloped  link to Peterhead in Scotland, that is marked UK.
  5. There appears to be a link to just North of the Humber in England, that is marked UK.
  6. Just North of the Humber are the two massive gas storage sites of Aldbrough owned by SSE and Brough owned by Centrica.
  7. Aldbrough and Rough gas storage sites are being converted into two of the largest hydrogen storage sites in the world!
  8. There appear to be small ships sailing up and down the East Coast of the UK. Are these small coastal tankers, that are distributing the hydrogen to where it is needed?

When it is completed, AquaVentus will be a very comprehensive hydrogen network.

I believe that offshore electrolysers could be built in the area of the Hornsea 4 and Dogger Bank South wind farms and the hydrogen generated would be taken by AquaVentus to either Germany or the UK.

  • Both countries get the hydrogen they need.
  • Excess hydrogen would be stored in Aldbrough and Rough.
  • British Steel gets decarbonised.
  • A 1.8 GW hydrogen-fired powerstation at Keadby gets the hydrogen it needs to backup the wind farms.

Germany and the UK get security in the supply of hydrogen.

These may be my best guesses, but they are based on published plans.

May 7, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Hydrogen | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

18-State Coalition Sues Trump Administration Over Block On Wind Energy Projects

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

This is the sub-heading.

A coalition of 18 state attorneys general has filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s directive to stop federal approvals for both onshore and offshore wind energy developments, warning that the policy could seriously damage the wind industry and hinder progress on renewable energy.

These two introductory paragraphs add some details.

The coalition alleges that the administration’s directive and federal agencies’ subsequent implementation of it violate the Administrative Procedure Act and other laws by offering no reasoned justification for reversing federal policy and freezing all approvals.

The lawsuit, led by New York state, also alleges that the sudden halt on all permitting violates numerous federal statutes that prescribe specific procedures and timelines for federal permitting and approvals.

As New York state is mentioned, I wonder if this case could end up in front of The Lady On The Train, who turned out to be a New York State Supreme Court Judge.

May 6, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , | 6 Comments

Plan For England’s Largest Wind Farm ‘Scaled Back’

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

This is the sub-heading.

Plans for the largest onshore wind farm in England have been scaled back by a developer.

These two introductory paragraphs add more details.

Calderdale Energy Park said it would apply for permission to build 41 turbines instead of the 65 originally planned on land near Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire.

A consultation period has now begun and people have been invited to submit their views on the project over the next six weeks.

Note.

  1. The number of wind turbines has been reduced by 37 %.
  2. Are the turbines now larger?
  3. In another paragraph, the developers say the solar element has been removed.
  4. Batteries, which I feel are essential to smooth the output of wind farms, are not mentioned.

Given comments by Stop Calderdale Wind Farm about peat bogs, there will be a large fight over building this wind farm.

April 30, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , , | 2 Comments

New York Governor: ‘I Will Not Allow This Federal Overreach To Stand’

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

This is the sub-heading.

Following the order of the US Department of the Interior (DOI) to halt all construction activities on the Empire Wind 1 offshore wind project, New York Governor Kathy Hochul said she would fight the federal decision.

This fight could get very nasty.

In the green corner, we have the New York governor; Kathy Hochul, Østed, Denmark and probably a lot of workers who thought they’d retrained for a new growing industry.

And in the orange corner, we have Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and all the other useful idiots.

Interestingly, I may have met one of referees to this spat.

In The Lady On The Train, I describe a meeting with one of the most powerful justices in the United States.

As she either sat on the US Supreme Court or the New York State Supreme Court, it will be interesting how she would judge this case, given the liberal scientifically-correct conversation we had a few years ago.

The fight in the Courts would be very hard against a whole bench of formidable adversaries like this lady.

 

April 17, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Chinese firm ‘Will Not Bid’ To Run Essex Nuclear Plant

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

This is the sub-heading.

Sources no longer expect planning applications to be submitted by China General Nuclear Power Group for Bradwell B

These three paragraphs give brief details of the current situation.

Plans for China’s state-run nuclear company to develop and operate a proposed nuclear site in Essex will no longer go ahead, The Times can reveal amid renewed focus on Chinese involvement in Britain’s critical infrastructure.

Bradwell B, the proposed nuclear power station, was earmarked for investment by China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN) in 2015. CGN is the majority investor in the proposed development alongside French energy company EDF.

But government and industry sources told The Times and Times Radio they no longer expected planning applications to be submitted by CGN for the site, and EDF will look to take back the lease from the Chinese firm at the earliest opportunity.

So what will happen to the Bradwell Site?

This Google Map shows the Blackwater Estuary to the North of Southend.

Note.

  1. The Blackwater Estuary is at the top of the map.
  2. Bradwell Marina and Bradwell-on-Sea can be seen on the map to the South of the Blackwater Estuary.
  3. Southminster has a rail connection, which was used to handle the nuclear fuel and now has a passenger service to Wickford on the Southend Victoria to London Liverpool Street Line.

This second Google Map shows Bradwell-on-Sea and the North of the peninsular in greater detail.

Note.

  1. The remains of the three runways of the Second World War RAF Bradwell Bay can be picked out.
  2. The remains of Bradwell A nuclear power station are towards  the coast to the North-West of the former runways.
  3. It is large site.

I wonder, if the site could be used for backup to all the offshore wind farms in the area.

This is a list of all the wind farms, that are planned in the sea to the North and East of the Bradwell site.

  • The East Anglia Array is partly operational, but could grow to as much as 7.2 GW.
  • Greater Gabbard is 504 MW
  • Gunfleet Sands is 172 MW
  • London Array is 630 MW
  • North Falls is 504 MW

Note.

  1. That is a total of roughly 9 GW.
  2. There’s also plenty of space in the sea for more turbines.

All these wind turbines will need backup for when the wind goes on strike.

These are possibilities for backup.

Another Hinckley Point C Or Sizewell C

You can see why the government wants to build a big nuke on the Bradwell site.

The 3.26 GW of  a power station, which would be the size of Hinckley Point C would provide more than adequate backup.

But the builders of these power stations haven’t exactly covered themselves in glory!

  • Construction of Hinckley Point C started in the late 2010s and first power is expected in 2031.
  • Hinckley Point C power station has all the stink of bad project management.
  • The Nimbbies would also be out in force at Bradwell.

There are also all the financial problems and those with the Chinese, indicated in The Times article.

A Fleet Of Small Modular Reactors

Hinckley Point C will hopefully be a 3260 MW nuclear power station and Rolls-Royce are saying that their small modular reactors will have a capacity of 470 MW.

Simple mathematics indicate that seven Rolls-Royce SMRs could do the same job as Hinckley Point C.

The advantages of providing this capacity with a fleet of SMRs are as follows.

  • Each reactor can be built separately.
  • They don’t all have to be of the same type.
  • The total 3260 MW capacity could also be built at a pace, that matched the need of the wind farms.
  • Building could even start with one of each of the chosen two initial types, the Government has said it will order.
  • I also believe that there could be advantages in the sharing of resources.
  • The rail link to Southminster would enable the bringing in of the smaller components needed for SMRs by rail.

Hopefully, the power of a big nuke could be added to the grid in a shorter time.

A Number of Long Duration Energy Stores

Highview Power is building 4 x 200 MW/2.5 GWh liquid air batteries for Orsted in the UK ; 2 in Scotland and 2 in England. They are backed by the likes of Centrica, Goldman Sachs, Rio Tinto, the Lego family trust and others.

Each GWh of liquid air needs a tank about the largest size of those used to store LNG. I suspect like LNG tanks they could be partly underground to reduce the bulk.

A Hybrid System

Bradwell is a large site and could easily accommodate a pair of Highview Power batteries, two SMRs, and all the other electrical gubbins, which would total to around 1.5 GW/5 GWh. This should be sufficient backup, but there would be space to add more batteries or SMRs as needed.

 

April 17, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage | , , , , , | Leave a comment

AI Forecast To Fuel Doubling In Data Centre Electricity Demand By 2030

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

This is the sub-heading.

International Energy Agency predicts that artificial intelligence could help reduce total greenhouse gas emissions

These are the first two paragraphs.

Data centres will use more than twice as much electricity by 2030 than they do today as artificial intelligence drives demand, the International Energy Agency predicts.

The agency forecast that all data centres globally will use about 945 terawatt-hours of electricity each year by 2030, roughly three times as much as the UK’s total annual demand of 317 terawatt-hours in 2023.

I am very much an optimist, that here in the UK, we will be able to satisfy demand for the generation and distribution of electricity.

  • Our seas can accommodate enough wind turbines to provide the baseload of electricity we will need.
  • Roofs and fields will be covered in solar panels.
  • SSE seem to be getting their act together with pumped storage hydro in Scotland.
  • I am confident, that new energy storage technologies like Highview Power with the packing of companies like Centrica, Goldman Sachs, Rio Tinto and others will come good, in providing power, when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine.
  • Hopefully, Hinckley Point C and Sizewell C will be online and soon to be joined by the first of the new small modular nuclear reactors.
  • Hopefully, Mersey Tidal Power will be operating.
  • There will be innovative ideas like heata from Centrica’s research. The economical water heater even made BBC’s One Show last week.

The only problem will be the Nimbies.

April 11, 2025 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Computing, Energy | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

1.2 GW Rampion 2 Offshore Wind Farm Granted Development Consent

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

This is the sub-heading.

The UK has granted development consent to Rampion 2, the proposed 1.2 GW extension to the 400 MW Rampion offshore wind farm in Sussex. The Development Consent Order (DCO), issued by the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero on 4 April, will come into force on 28 April.

Rampion 2 is one of a number of extension wind farms that are listed in this list on Wikipedia.

They include.

  • Awel y Môr which is a 500 MW wind farm, that is adjacent to the  576 MW Gwynt y Môr wind farm
  • Five Estuaries, which is a 353 MW wind farm, that is adjacent to the  353 MW Galloper wind farm
  • North Falls, which is a 504 MW wind farm, that is adjacent to the  504 MW Greater Gabbard wind farm
  • Outer Dowsing is a 1500 MW extension to the 194 MW Lynn and Inner Dowsing wind farm.
  • Rampion 2 is a 1200 MW extension to the 400 MW Rampion wind farm.
  • Seagreen 1A is a 500 MW extension to the 1400 MW Seagreen 1 wind farm.
  • Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon Extensions, which is a 353 MW wind farm, that is adjacent to the  575 MW Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon wind farms

In total 3780 MW of wind farms are being increased in size by 4406 MW.

A parcel of seven web sites have been more than doubled in size. Is this more efficient to do them this way, as some resources from the previous wind farms can be shared and better use can be made of resources like ships and cranes?

I feel that some serious project management may have been done.

April 6, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , | Leave a comment

Octopus Energy Takes Stake In 714 MW East Anglia One Offshore Wind Farm In UK

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

This is the sub-heading.

Octopus Energy has acquired a 10 per cent stake in the 714 MW East Anglia One offshore wind farm in the UK, which was fully commissioned in 2020.

These two introductory paragraphs add more details.

Octopus acquired this latest wind farm stake from Macquarie Asset Management on behalf of Vector, Octopus’ offshore wind fund, which invests in fixed and floating offshore wind and pioneering tech to reduce costs.

Owned by ScottishPower Renewables and Macquarie’s Green Investment Group(GIG), the 714 MW wind farm is located 43 kilometers off the coast of Suffolk in the east of England and has been powering Britain with green energy since 2021.

East Anglia One has a web site, that gives a lot more details of the wind farm.

April 3, 2025 Posted by | Energy | , , , , | Leave a comment

From Doncaster To Cleethorpes

These pictures were taken on my journey between Doncaster and Cleethorpes.

The area is best summed up as flat and decorated with these features.

  • A few hedges.
  • Some trees and some woodland.
  • dozens of wind turbines.
  • Lots of pylons carrying electricity.
  • Scunthorpe steelworks
  • A few stations and railway sidings.
  • A couple of waterways.
  • Estates of new housing as you approach Grimsby.

When I returned there was more of the same on the other side of the tracks.

With the addition of all the power stations at Keadby and a couple of wind farms.

These are my thoughts on how this landscape will look at some time after 2030.

More Onshore Wind Farms

There will be a lot more wind farms lining the Doncaster and Cleethorpes railway.

The government has said it might pay for turbines and transmission lines to spoil views.

I feel they will have to, to meet their net-zero targets.

There Will Be Massive Hydrogen Storage On The Other Side Of The Humber

SSE are developing Albrough and Centrica are developing Rough into two of the largest hydrogen stores in the world.

The wind farms of the North Sea will provide them with hydrogen.

More Housing

If the government has its wish there will be a lot more new housing.

And as the newer houses show in my pictures, many of them will have solar panels.

More Power Stations At Keadby

Consider.

  • The main purpose of the power stations at Keadby will be to provide backup to the wind and solar power in the area and far out to sea.
  • The power stations will use hydrogen stored at Albrough and Rough.
  • Some of the gas-fired power stations at Keadby will be fitted with carbon capture.
  • One hydrogen-fired power station is already being planned.

The power stations at Keadby will probably be capable of supplying several GW of zero-carbon energy.

There Will Be Energy-Hungry Industries Along The South Bank Of The Humber

Just as in the Victorian era, coal attracted steel-making, chemicals and refining to the area, a South Humberside with large amounts of energy will attract heavy industry again.

Already, Siemens have built a train factory at Goole.

There Will Also Be Large Greenhouses In Lincolnshire

Greenhouses are a wonderful green way of absorbing waste heat and carbon dioxide.

Where Have I Seen This Blend Of Offshore Energy, Hydrogen, Heavy Industry And Agriculture Before?

After I visited Eemshaven in the Northern Netherlands, I wrote The Dutch Plan For Hydrogen.

We are not doing something similar, but something much bigger, based on the hydrogen stores at Aldbrough and Brough, the massive offshore wind farms and Lincolnshire’s traditional heavy industry and agriculture.

The Railway Between Doncaster and Cleethorpes Will Be Developed

Just as the Dutch have developed the railways between Groningen and Eemshaven.

 

March 25, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Zenobē Lands Financing For 400MW Eccles Project

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Solar Power Portal.

This is the sub-heading.

Battery energy storage system (BESS) developer/operator Zenobē has announced that it has successfully financed its Eccles BESS project in Scotland, in one of the biggest finance rounds in European history.

These two paragraphs add more details.

The total debt raised for the 400MW/800MWh project was £220 million, which the company says is one of the largest finance raises for a standalone BESS project ever made in Europe. The funding was provided by a group of lenders organised by National Westminster Bank and KKR Capital Markets Partners LLP. Additionally, Zenobē has announced that construction on the Eccles BESS—the company’s largest battery project to date—has begun.

The Eccles BESS is the final part of the firm’s £750 million investment in Scotland. Zenobē’s Blackhillock BESS, a 200MW/400MWh project located near Inverness, recently began commercial operations, and is set to expand to 300MW/600MWh later this year.

Zenobe seem to be able to finance these projects, without too much difficulty.

Construction seems to have started. But then, I suspect there are wind turbines in the vScottish Borders already lined up to use the batteries.

This Google Map shows an Eccles substation.

Note.

  1. The Eccles substation is marked by the red arrow.
  2. The town at the East edge of the map is Coldstream.
  3. The England-Scotland border is clearly marked.

This second Google Map shows a closer view of the Eccles substation.

Note.

  1. t looks to be a substantial substation.
  2. There would appear to be plenty of space for a large battery.
  3. It is close to the A 597 road for the delivery of heavy equipment.

I suspect this substation could be the location of the battery.

It’s also right in the heart of Scottish onshore wind territory.

It is also according to the Solar Power Portal a £220 million project.

A project of this size will deliver substantial benefits in terms of work to the local community.

It will likely have a community benefit fund or something similar.

So you would expect the project would be welcomed into the local area.

But you would be wrong, if this article on the BBC, which is entitled Village ‘Heart Ripped Out’ By Battery Site Plans, is typical of the feeling about the batteries.

This is the sub-heading.

A rural community in the Borders is warning that Scotland’s renewable energy revolution is coming at a cost.

These three paragraphs add more detail.

Residents of Leitholm – a village between Coldstream and Greenlaw – claim the heart is being ripped out of their community with the arrival of battery storage facilities.

If all six proposed facilities are approved, more than 200 acres of farmland will be turned over to concreted compounds within a three-kilometre radius of their village.

Retired nursery owner Seonaid Blackie said: “This is not the place it used to be – people are worried sick.”

The residents view is balanced by industry expert Professor John Irvine, from St Andrew’s University, believes energy storage has a vital role to play in reaching net-zero targets.

My view is what is needed is an energy storage system, that can be built substantially underground.

If you look at large Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS), they are best described as container parks.

We need energy storage systems, that fit in a single tennis court, rather than thirty football pitches.

Gravitricity is one possibility, who are also Scottish, who store energy using weights in disused mine shafts.

The French system; DELPHY is also a vertical system for storing hydrogen in a custom-built hole.

Practically, I believe the solution adopted will be to spread the batteries out and spend money on surrounding them with trees and other camouflage.

 

March 20, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Environment, Finance & Investment | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment