Neart Na Gaoithe

Neart Na Gaoithe
Location of Neart Na Gaoithe in Scotland
Country Scotland, United Kingdom
Location Firth of Forth
Coordinates 56°16′04″N 2°19′15″W / 56.26778°N 2.32083°WCoordinates: 56°16′04″N 2°19′15″W / 56.26778°N 2.32083°W
Status Proposed
Owner(s) Mainstream Renewable Power
Wind farm
Type Offshore
Distance from shore 20 km (12 mi)
Rotor diameter 154 m
Power generation
Make and model Siemens SWT-6.0-154
Units planned 75
Nameplate capacity 450 MW

Neart Na Gaoithe ("strength of the wind" in Gaelic) is a proposed a £1.4bn offshore wind farm with a potential capacity of 450 MW in the outer Firth of Forth, 30 km north of Torness. It is being developed by Mainstream Renewable Power.

Planning

Mainstream Renewable Power was awarded exclusive rights to develop the wind farm in February 2009.[1] They proposed using 125 3.6MW turbines or 75 6MW turbines to generate between 420 and 450 megawatts of electricity.[1] In 2011, surveyors conducting a detailed preparatory survey of the sea floor published sonar images of the wrecks of the two submarines – K-4 and K-17 – sunk during the Battle of May Island in 1918.[2]

A planning application was submitted in July 2012.[3] The developers said that the wind farm would occupy an area of around 65 square miles, would require between 64 and 125 turbines, and would generate 450MW of electricity.[3] The estimated cost was £1.4 billion.[3]

In February 2014 they confirmed that they would be using 75 Siemens SWT-6.0-154 turbines each with a 6 megawatt capacity.[4] A UK government contract was awarded in February 2015.[5] Construction is expected to begin in 2015.[6]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Wind views wanted, East Lothian Courier, 28 Apr 2011
  2. Macdonell, Hamish (August 13, 2011). "Sea search stumbles upon submarines Navy tried to forget". The Times Scotland. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Mainstream submits £1.4bn plan for Fife wind farm, BBC News, 29 July 2012
  4. Critical period for Fife’s £1.4 billion Neart Na Gaoithe windfarm as preferred contractors named, TheCourier, 20 February 2014
  5. "Scottish wind farm projects secure contracts". BBC News. 26 February 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  6. UK green policy risks development, say Scots ministers, BBC News, 4 December 2013

External links