Norther Offshore Wind Farm

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Norther
CountryBelgium
LocationBelgian North Sea
Coordinates51°31′41″N 3°01′55″E / 51.528°N 3.032°E / 51.528; 3.032Coordinates: 51°31′41″N 3°01′55″E / 51.528°N 3.032°E / 51.528; 3.032
StatusOperational
Commission date2019
Owner(s)Elicio NV,
Eneco
Wind farm
TypeOffshore
Max. water depth33 m
Distance from shore23 km
Rotor diameter164 m
Site area38 km2
Power generation
Make and modelVestas V164-8.4
Units planned44 × 8.4 MW
Nameplate capacity369.6 MW
Capacity factor43.1% (projected)
Annual net output1,394 GW·h

Norther is an offshore wind farm in the Belgian North Sea, within the Exclusive Economic Zone of Belgium, approximately 23 kilometres from the Belgian port of Ostend. The concession was granted at the end of 2009, which is when the actual development of the project began.[1]

The wind farm has a total of 44 Vestas V164-8.4 MW turbines on monopile foundations for a nameplate capacity of 369.6 MW with a projected annual production of 1,394 GWh, corresponding to a capacity factor of 43.1% and the average consumption of almost 400,000 households.[1][2] The wind farm spans an area of 38 km2 with water depths up to 33 m.[3] A seaweed farm is planned between the turbines.[4]

The Norther offshore wind farm was developed through a joint venture between Elicio NV, a Belgian renewable energy producer operating internationally; and the Dutch utility company Eneco, who is a major producer and supplier of renewable electricity, natural gas and heat in the Netherlands and Belgium; and Diamond Generating Europe Ltd, is a fully owned subsidiary of Mitsubishi Corporation and cover power and water generation projects, as well as power downstream business in Europe, Middle East and Africa.[1]

Offshore wind is expected to be a key element of Belgium's future energy mix and is projected to represent around 10% of total generated electricity by 2025.[1] Norther Wind is operational since 2019.[1]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e "The Norther Project". norther.be. 2016. Retrieved 2017-03-19.
  2. ^ "World's most powerful wind turbine selected for Belgium's largest offshore wind park". mhivestasoffshore.com. 2016-12-15. Retrieved 2017-03-19.
  3. ^ "Norther Offshore Wind Farm". 4coffshore.com. Retrieved 2017-03-19.
  4. ^ Lee, Andrew (15 July 2020). "World-first bid to grow 'food of the future' seaweed at offshore wind farm | Recharge". Recharge | Latest renewable energy news. Archived from the original on 16 July 2020.

External links[]

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