How wind power can fan the Merseyside economy

LIVERPOOL can be a city famous for the production of hot air – generally forming large clouds which, like morning dew, never amount to any substance.

But, luckily, Mother Nature also blows plenty of around the Mersey estuary and Irish Sea of a much more permanent and useful nature.

All quite alluring when the buzzword in the vitality world is “renewable”.

At a time when fossil fuels are becoming additional inaccessible and nuclear power is still regarded with unease, trapped is the answer – not the difficulty.

Even so, Britain usually lost out 25 years ago at the birth with the European wind energy energy industry.

After initial interest, Britain pulled out whereas Denmark, Germany, Spain as well as the US seized the chance to develop and manufacture turbine technology.

Yet, in 10 years’ time, and marine power will supply additional than 30% with the UK’s electricity, resulting in much more than £60bn of investment and 70,000 new jobs.

Geographically, Liverpool sits inside the centre on the west coast area, with farms already whirring away at Burbo Bank, North Hoyle and Rhyl Flats, in the Crown Estate Round 1 and 2 projects.

As part of Round 3, a enormous Irish Sea wind farm, between Liverpool and also the Isle of Man, has been licensed by The Crown Estate to Centrica British Gas.

Not visible from the shore, the turbines will be the equivalent of 80 storeys high.

Industry trade association RenewableUK attracted 1,700 delegates to its Offshore Conference at Liverpool’s BT Convention Centre last week. Feedback was so great it plans to return next year.

The delegates consisted of representatives of European strength businesses, suppliers and financiers involved in renewable energy, with a spending power of around £100bn.

Its importance is shown by the support from strength producers Dong, EDF, E.ON and RWE; leading turbine producers Siemens UK, Clipper, Vattenfall and Vestas (the world’s largest).

Maria McCaffery, RenewableUK chief executive, from Kirkby, hopes Merseyside will meet the energy challenge.

She “applauded” The Mersey Partnership’s initiative to pull together the resources of Peel Ports, Cammell Laird and Stobart Group to showcase the present local supply chain.

“We will deploy our influence to develop interest from the Port of Liverpool as principal hub for North West offshore , said Ms McCaffery.

Concrete, steel, paints, expensive gearboxes, blades and transmission cabling are all required to create farms.

The components also have to transported to a central assembly point and onto their destination.

“For each and every £1 spent on a turbine, £1 is spent on distribution,” said Mark Knowles, The Mersey Partnership low carbon economy manager.

“There is usually a substantial new market for present corporations too as new firms, for building and maintenance.”

Bibby Line Group, of Liverpool, is building , a survey ship for charter to Osiris Projects, Bromborough, to research potential farm websites.

Three of the UK’s primary cable makers are on Merseyside, for example Tratos, Knowsley, and North West Control Cables, Ellesmere Port.

Other beneficiaries could consist of suppliers like diving and help firm Hughes Sub Surface Engineering, West Derby, and motor maintainers Rewinds & J Windsor (RJW), Liverpool.

What of power’s cost – surely it compares unfavourably with fossil or nuclear fuels?

“Wind power is costly compared to nuclear, but it won™t be in 20 years’ time,” said Christian Egal, EDFâ€s UK energy renewable chief executive officer.

œBy that time, oil, gas and coal could be much a lot more expensive and will become the cheapest energy of all.”

EDF, the UK’s leading energy organization, has a target to develop one gigawatt by 2015 from its onshore and offshore farms, for example Teesside, off the east coast.

“The turbines will come from abroad, as there are no UK makers,” said Mr Egal.

power has to be supported by some kind of government mechanism to make it happen over the next decade and profitable for private organizations.

“This public money is an investment for the future as we need to have a mix with carbon-free energies

One with the conference’s sponsors, Sub Ocean Marine Cable Installation, of Aberdeen, has just completed the undersea cabling for Rhyl Flats Farm.

Keith Johnston, Sub Ocean’s tendering manager and a conference delegate, said: power and renewables are the new oil and gas industry.

“The industry started small and is growing year on year. It’s not big yet, but is beyond its infancy and will be large.

“This conference has been quite worthwhile for making a lot of contacts.”

Dennis Henderson, Peel Ports group business development director, said: “The Liverpool city region has some real natural assets for supporting offshore farms inside Irish Sea and west coast.

“This could be a extremely large and exciting project. While the biggest Round 3 websites are on the east coast, it does not have the manufacturing capability.

“We shouldnt be disappointed as there are more contracts to win along with the core manufacturing of turbines and blades could easily be done in this area.

“Cammell Laird is the perfect site and has the skill-sets, but is not quite large enough for an entire hub.

“Combined with Peel’s Bridgewater Paper Mill site, at Port Ince, we could locate the farm supply chain along the Manchester Ship Canal with Laird’s for final assembly and shipment to the Irish Sea.

“Stobarts Group’s Mersey Multimodal Gateway site at Widnes is significant, as not all components will be made locally.

“Many from the turbine suppliers are in Germany along with the Port of Liverpool has services from Bremerhaven.â

Peels Medway port of Sheerness could also be linked by barges to Liverpool to service both east and west coasts, he said.

“This can be a winning combination, as it means just extending our existing facilities, not building from scratch as on Humberside,€ said Mr Henderson.

David Williams, Cammell Laird business development manager, said: “We’re extremely interested in these offshore power developments.

“This is a new and emerging market with new technology, but the engineering cost-effective level is very important.

“We believe Cammell Laird has a unique geographical location for bringing in components, assembly and final distribution,

“The shipyard has unique facilities with a harbour structure and a non-tidal wet basin.

“The migration of our dynamic, skilled shipyard workforce is really effective in power engineering and its heavy fabrication.

“What€™s out there comes from Europe, but the key is we can have a incredibly cost-effective base if we get organised.

“This is a not a gold rush scenario, but a long-term opportunity for business and business throughout the North West.”

Merseyside’s best-known windfarm is at Burbo Bank, with twenty-five, 137m-high wind turbines, built for a 20-year lifespan.

Owner Dong Power, the leading Danish utility company, is undertaking a year-long negotiation with the Crown Estate to extend Burbo Bank Farm, possibly tripling its size.

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