Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Atlantic Array Wind Farm Proposal Sinks Slowly Into The West

Maybe they were pushed before they were shoved, but developer RWE Innogy has decided to pull the metaphorical plug on the 240-turbine Atlantic Array project, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has announced

The scheme, which had not yet received the go-ahead, had attracted criticism, with environmentalists worried about its impact on marine wildlife in the Bristol Channel. RWE Innogy merely announced that it was "not the right time" for the project, leaving a suspicion in the air that they may be waiting for “the right time”
An Array in some disarray

The Atlantic Array was planned to be sited in an area of 200 sq km (77 sq miles) about 16.5km (10 miles) from the north Devon coast, 22.5km (14 miles) from south Wales coast and 13.5km (8 miles) from Lundy Island nature reserve. The turbines would have been 220m (720ft) tall and capable of producing 1,200 megawatts of electricity - enough for up to 900,000 homes, the developer has said.
It is when you digest those figures that you begin to realise the enormity of the scheme.

However RWE continued by saying that the project was not viable. Director of offshore wind (yes, there is one) Paul Cowling said: "This is not a decision we have taken lightly. However, given the technological challenges and market conditions, now is not the right time for RWE to continue to progress with this project."

DECC said that the scrapping of the scheme was a matter for the developer, but the decision "was made on purely technical grounds and reflects the many complex challenges of constructing offshore wind farms".

But local media experts have been picking up vibes about the money side of things, one saying: "Sources have told us that this will not go ahead because of problems in financing it. Just last week, [green energy group] Regen SW said that the government's recent announcement that it is going to cut back on green levies to support renewable energy was already undermining investment in the region and putting jobs at risk. In terms of investment and jobs, this is a really big project, the company (RWE) says it would provide thousands of jobs."

Friends of the Earth's head of campaigns, Andrew Pendleton, said: "The government's wanton green-bashing is starting to cost jobs and threaten the future security of our energy supply.
"The UK has some of the finest offshore clean energy resources in the world and harnessing it is becoming cheaper. But anti-green ideology at the heart of the coalition is sending the development of world-beating clean power into reverse."

Countering this, DECC said: "The UK still expects to deploy significant amounts of offshore wind by 2020 and we remain well placed to meet our 2020 renewable energy target."

Unsurprisingly locals such as Derek Green, manager of Lundy Island, were pleased with the news. "If it's true then we are absolutely delighted,” he said "It is fantastic news for tourism and wildlife in the Bristol Channel and in particular for Lundy."

Lundy's owners, the Landmark Trust, have spent the last 40 years "preserving a special way of life. We were concerned that by bringing development so close to the island that it would overwhelm it," said Mr Green. There are many turbines near Landmark Trust properties which we haven't opposed.”
"But we have always said that offshore wind farms should be built offshore and this suite was in the middle of the Bristol Channel. We all need electricity, but there are more appropriate places."

Other critics also welcomed the move. Steve Crowther, from the superbly named local campaign group Slay the Array, said: "This was clearly an ill-conceived scheme in completely the wrong place."

                                                      This is what the fuss was all about

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