Offshore Wind Conference sees cost target smashed

27/01/17 | Blog

Tuesday marked something of a turning point for the UK’s offshore wind industry.

The publication of the latest Cost Reduction Monitoring Framework showed the long-held cost reduction target of £100/MWh had been smashed – four years ahead of schedule.

On the same day, delegates at Scottish Renewables’ Offshore Wind Conference had plenty to debate.

Speaking at the conference on the publication of the CRMF, Jonathan Cole, ScottishPower Renewables’ Offshore Managing Director and Chairman of the Offshore Wind Programme Board, said:

“Offshore wind is the lowest cost means of decarbonising our energy sector. We tick every box [in the UK Government’s recently-published Industrial Strategy].
“Those facts are putting us front and centre in the energy debate.”

Jonathan also made his expectations for the sector clear.

Offshore wind costs, he said:


"Can go far below the targets set by government. Getting below £85 [per MWh] is easily achievable”.

The technological innovations which will help the industry move towards these cost levels were the subject of two sessions delivered in association with the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult.

Dr Federico D’Amico, Project Coordinator of EDF Energy’s five-turbine, 41.5MW Blyth Offshore Demonstrator, told how the project is using the world’s largest wind turbines and innovative bases to drive down costs.

The ‘buoyant gravity bases’ are built in a dry dock and floated out to site – cutting their price significantly.

Each of the innovative structures will contain 60 sensors so their performance can be analysed from shore.

Modus Seabed Intervention’s Angus Cooper showed off the company’s hybrid AUV, an underwater drone developed with Saab which carries out survey tasks without human intervention.

Siemens Wind Power’s Head of Business Development, Ray Thompson, also touched on drones in a presentation which outlined how far the industry had come.

He highlighted how:

“Bigger turbines means fewer turbines, which means fewer bases and cables and boat movements – all of which means costs can be reduced.

“We are now doing in hours what would have taken us days or even weeks before. That's a different paradigm entirely to where we were just a few years ago.”

Ray also talked about the company’s new £310 million turbine blade factory in Hull:


“The change in Hull is spectacular. We have created 800 new jobs and we are transforming the economy.

“It's incredibly uplifting to visit that factory and see what can be done when you start with a clean sheet of paper.”

The 16 apprentices who joined Siemens in the Hull factory’s first annual intake will work towards industry qualifications which didn’t exist even a handful of years ago.

Academia’s importance to cost reduction and innovation in offshore wind shouldn’t be underestimated, and keynote speaker Dame Anne Glover’s passion for that focus shone through in her presentation.

Dame Anne, former Chief Scientific Adviser for Scotland, is a board member of the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult.

She told delegates that Scotland's research is cited by other researchers around the world more often than any other country, in comparison to its GDP.

Industry, she says, must do more to capitalise on this pool of academic talent because “it would be utterly foolish not to”:

“We need to challenge the research community.
“All over Europe there are people who are looking for questions to which they can apply their thinking on your behalf.”

Dame Anne also cited Star Trek tech from the 1960s as examples of technology once considered science fiction which we now take for granted.

Smooth, flat, touch-based control panels were used on the Starship Enterprise in episodes screened in the 1960s, and most of us now own smartphones and tablets which look almost identical.

This kind thinking, decades in advance and imagining the impossible, she said, would allow industries like offshore wind to continue to innovate and improve performance.

That theme was picked up later in the day by Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult CEO Andrew Jamieson.

The CRMF, produced by the Catapult, shows the cost of power from offshore turbines has fallen 32% in just four years.

It’s an important achievement, but Andrew cautioned that the industry shouldn’t be complacent.

He said:

“Do not think that costs are coming down and that we can then take the foot off the gas and stop innovating.

“We must keep driving on the cost and on the economic benefits.”

Andrew also pointed to the aerospace and automotive industries, which continue to innovate “even though most people can now afford cars and air travel”.

With so much positivity throughout the day, it’s difficult not to be excited about what offshore wind has to offer for Scotland.

Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse, opening the conference just hours before delivering the Government’s draft Scottish energy strategy to Parliament, agreed.

Highlighting good news for CS Wind, 2-B, the Aberdeen Bay Wind Farm and the Beatrice project he said:

“Offshore wind is one of the solutions to the transformation in Scotland's energy system.”

With the draft energy strategy now proposing even more ambitious targets for renewable energy generation, harnessing the wind above our seas will continue to play a key role in meeting that target at lowest cost.

Blog by Lindsay Roberts, Senior Policy Manager, Scottish Renewables