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Economic Development

RWE outlines next steps after huge lease agreement for Dogger Bank South offshore wind farms

Development consent order anticipated next year as it narrows down vital location for onshore grid connection

The location of RWE's Dogger Bank South West and East sites, which have just had lease agreements completed with The Crown Estate.(Image: RWE)

The developer behind two of the three new offshore wind farms that now have lease agreements off the region’s coastline has given further details on the dual project.

RWE is behind Dogger Bank South, with East and West sites now agreed off the North Yorkshire coast with The Crown Estate. Both will have a 1.5GW capacity, slightly higher than the current neighbouring world leader, Hornsea Two, providing the ability to generate enough electricity for three million homes.

Located south of the Sofia project it is currently developing, for which operations and maintenance are to be based in Grimsby, the latest addition to its portfolio that includes Triton Knoll and Humber Gateway is highly likely to follow suit.

Read more: Crown's wind farm windfall to be used for wider public good as King passes on profits

The sites are located more than 100km offshore, in the shallow North Sea zone.

Welcoming the signing, Tom Glover, RWE’s º£½ÇÊÓÆµ country chair, said: “RWE is one of the world’s leaders in offshore wind, and the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ plays a key strategic role in the growth of our renewables business and becoming carbon neutral by 2040. With 10 offshore wind farms now in operation around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, RWE is already a leading partner in delivering clean, home-grown energy and security of electricity supply.

RWE º£½ÇÊÓÆµ country chair Tom Glover, second right, is flanked by Grimsby MP Lia Nici and Cleethorpes MP Martin Vickers, accompanied by a team member aboard the service operation vessel, on a previous visit to Grimsby.(Image: RWE)

"Dogger Bank South (East) and Dogger Bank South (West) will be our largest offshore wind developments to date; using our industry expertise pioneered over 20 years in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, we plan to maximise this potential for the benefit of local businesses, creating new, high quality long term jobs and supporting new skills development, investing in both the regional and national economies. We are delighted to be able to take the next steps towards realising this important energy project and look forward to working with local people along the way.”

The German-headquartered company said it has already spent almost two years developing the project at its own risk in order to fast-track ‘DBS’ in support of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s net zero aspirations. So far, this has included offshore and onshore studies, collecting metocean data and a series of geophysical and environmental surveys. In July last year, RWE submitted the scoping report for the DBS projects to the Planning Inspectorate which then issued a Scoping Opinion in September 2022.