Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Scottish Home Awards

SSE warns of wind farm delay after £39m Irish Sea deal

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 24 December 2009
SCOTTISH & Southern Energy has warned that construction of many of its Scottish wind farms could be delayed after it bought a stake in a £1 billion project in the Irish Sea.


• Ian Marchant: Deal strengthens offshore construction portfolio

Perth-based SSE has acquired 25.1 per cent of the Walney Wind Farm Project, east of the Isle of Walney near the Isle of Man, paying up to £39 million to Dong of Denmark.

The deal requires SSE to pay about £250m towards the construction costs of the wind farm, which is designed to have a capacity of 367 megawatts when it is completed near the end of 2011.

Yesterday, SSE said that funding for the project would come from its investment budget for the five years to March 2013, which will lead to "some other projects previously in the programme being delayed". A spokeswoman said SSE would give Walney priority over some other wind farms, but did not have details about which projects face delays.

SSE, through its renewable energy business Airtricity, has 30 wind farm projects in the UK which are in the planning process or construction, with 27 of these in Scotland or its surrounding waters.

High-profile projects such as Greater Gabbard in the Thames estuary and Clyde, the world's largest onshore wind farm, are unlikely to be affected by delays because construction is already well advanced.

Chief executive Ian Marchant said the potential for harnessing wind off the coast of the UK was "vast", and that Walney and Greater Gabbard gave it a strong offshore construction portfolio for the coming years. Construction of Walney will be completed in two phases, the first of which is expected to begin early in 2010.

The second phase, which will use new 120 metre turbines designed by Seimens, will begin later in the year.

SSE will pay £22m to Dong, and up to a further £17m depending on Walney's performance.





Page 1 of 1

 
1

,

24/12/2009 02:49:08
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Submariner,

24/12/2009 15:51:20
Since when was the "Isle of Walney" near the Isle of Man
It is actually called "Walney Island" and it is at Barrow in Furness.
Marchant should come clean and admit that he is going for the offshore windfarm because he will get double ROCS for it.
The only good news is the deferring of some of his onshore environmental destruction.
At which point are our stupid politicians going to realise that wind power does not reduce the CO2 claimed or that CO2 is not really a problem
3

Martyk,

24/12/2009 15:59:08
Relative to Mars it is near the IOM.
4

Sanny,

Upwey 25/12/2009 11:16:49
2 Submariner: -
You and the rest of the flat earth society are both wrong and stupid.
Atmospheric CO2 is at one of its lowest levels in the last 500 million years. The IPCC is a global con! During the last Ice Age the C)2 levels were 12 times today’s value and now we are supposed to worry about a miniscule increase caused by man. One earthquake will make nonsense of our current worries.
5

Sanny,

Upwey 25/12/2009 11:23:10
C)2 should read CO2
6

Submariner,

25/12/2009 20:41:25
Sanny - Why did you call me stupid and then go on to agree with me.
Too much Christmas spirit I fear!

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.