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Economic Development

Onshore wind pledge from Sir Keir Starmer as offshore needs heard at Grimsby operations epicentre

The Leader of the Opposition took in Orsted's £14m East Coast Hub and nearby onshore wind farm Bishopthorpe, in the first parish beyond North East Lincolnshire

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, third left, visits Orsted in Grimsby, accompanied from left, by Melanie Onn, deputy chief executive of Renewable º£½ÇÊÓÆµ; Darren Ramshaw, head of generation º£½ÇÊÓÆµ at Orsted and Richard Bodal Hansen, director of external affairs at Orsted.(Image: GrimsbyLive/Donna Clifford)

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer used a visit to Grimsby to meet with senior clean energy industry figures, with an urgent need for a return for onshore wind and further offshore strategy agreed upon.

Steps that could help cut bills as quick as possible were under the microscope as he made a rapid return to the town - the very eastern edge of the northern ‘red wall’ shattered in 2019.

He joined ousted Labour MP Melanie Onn - now deputy chief executive of Renewable º£½ÇÊÓÆµ - and CEO Dan McGrail, taking in both Bishopthorpe onshore wind farm at Tetney, a parish just outside the town, and Orsted’s world-leading offshore hub on the docks. It was the take-up of an invite extended over from his previous visit, curtailed by the Sue Gray report publication and the controversy at the end of Boris Johnson's time in the job he's keen to take on.

Read more: º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's admission to Global Offshore Wind Alliance 'a vote of confidence' in world-leading industry

At the £14 million Royal Dock base, he met apprentices and took in a private round table meeting involving onshore specialist BayWa RE and Orsted's quayside neighbours Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult and RWE.

They secured the backing of Sir Keir for a reform of the planning system in England to enable onshore wind farms to go ahead, alongside wider measures to boost renewables and cut bills. He heard how under the current system there is a “de facto ban” on new onshore wind, where planning rules have led to a 95 per cent drop in the amount of onshore wind capacity being built. It is one of the cheapest forms of new power and one of the quickest to build.

Sir Keir Starmer on the balcony of Orsted's East Coast Hub, with the base of Grimsby's Dock Tower beyond. (Image: GrimsbyLive/Donna Clifford)

A desire for a new industrial strategy to enable the sector to scale up more rapidly was also expressed, with Sir Keir hearing how there is an urgent need to build new infrastructure at ports around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, upgrade the electricity grid faster and reform the Contracts for Difference support scheme to maximise the amount of new capacity that can be secured annually to help build up the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s supply chain.

Sir Keir said: “The solution to the energy crisis is clear – we need to go all out for cheap, clean, home-grown power as fast as we can. From green hydrogen to offshore wind, gigafactories to new nuclear and tidal power, Labour will help these new industries to thrive. And we will reverse this Government’s policies that are blocking the growth of onshore wind and solar, which are vital sources of cheap power for bill payers.