November 16, 2024
Global Renewable News

WINDEUROPE
UK awards 5.3 GW of new offshore wind and 990 MW of new onshore wind

September 4, 2024

The UK has announced the results of its latest auction for new wind farms (AR6).
6.3 GW of new wind capacity won Contracts for Difference (CfDs). 5.3 GW were offshore wind, including 400 MW of floating wind. 990 MW were onshore wind. This is good, not least after the UK didn't get any offshore wind project through its last auction. But the UK will need bigger volumes in its next auctions if it's going to meet its ambitious 2030 goals to decarbonise electricity.

A better auction for offshore wind than last time

The UK's last auction didn't get any bids from offshore wind. The price ceiling was too low.  The UK then raised the price ceiling for this auction by 66% to a more realistic £73/MWh.  The new Labour Government then increased the budget for this auction, which helped get a few more projects though than looked likely a few months ago.   

The overall result is a reasonably good auction for offshore wind. Nine bottom-fixed projects totalling 4.9GW of new capacity have won Contracts for Difference (CfDs). And one floating wind project of 400MW got a CfD too. But the UK will need bigger volumes from its next auctions if it's going to meet its ambitious 2030 goals for offshore wind.    

The winning offshore wind projects include:

  • Hornsea 3 (1.1GW)   Ørsted at a strike price of £54.23/MWh
  • Hornsea 4 (2.4GW)   Ørsted at £58.87/MWh
  • East Anglia 2 (support awarded for 963MW)   Iberdrola / ScottishPower Renewables at £58.87/MWh
  • East Anglia 3 (158.9MW)  Iberdrola / ScottishPower Renewables at £54.23/MWh
  • Inch Cape A & B (266MW) ESB and Red Rock Renewables at £54.23/MWh
  • Moray West Offshore Wind Farm (73.5MW) OW Ocean Winds and Ignitis Group at £54.23/MWh
  • Green Volt Offshore Wind Farm (floating) £139.93/MWh

Things looking up for onshore wind

This latest auction awarded CfDs to 22 onshore wind farms totalling 990MW.  The average strike price was £59.90/MWh. Most of the onshore projects are in Scotland.  Some are in Wales, and there is a small one one in England. The new UK Governments has lifted the de facto ban on new onshore wind in England, but it will take a while for projects to come through in the auctions - the Government is setting up an onshore wind taskforce to unlock the barriers to onshore wind and restore a sizeable pipeline of new projects in England.

The new wind farms awarded in this auction, offshore and onshore, will mean over £14bn of new private investment. The first projects will start generating electricity in 2026.

The expansion of wind energy is at the centre of the new UK Government's goal to fully decarbonise UK electricity consumption by 2030. They have committed to double onshore wind and quadruple offshore wind capacity by 2030. The industry will have to step up the build out of projects and maximise the volumes and budget per auctions.

"This is going in the right direction - and it is a big improvement on last year's failed offshore wind auction. But the UK needs to secure more clean energy capacity in each annual auction reach its current targets. Auctions like this also help to unlock new supply chain investment - and are key to strengthening the UK's existing supply chain", says Giles Dickson CEO of WindEurope.

ABOUT WINDEUROPE
WindEurope is the voice of the wind industry, actively promoting wind energy across Europe. We have over 500 members from across the whole value chain of wind energy; wind turbine manufacturers; component suppliers; power utilities and wind farm developers; financial institutions; research institutes and the national wind energy associations. 

For additional questions, please contact:
Clara Castelli 
WindEurope
Press & Communications Assistant 
clara.castelli@windeurope.org
+32 490 42 66 76

For more information

WindEurope
Rue Belliard 40, 1040
Brussels Antwerpen
Belgique
windeurope.org


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