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Economic Development

Successful bidders to deliver two huge floating windfarms in the Celtic Sea revealed

The Crown Estate has named Equinor and a joint venture between EDF Renewables º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and ESB as preferred bidders

Offshore wind turbines(Image: Getty)

The identity of successful bidders to build two huge floating offshore windfarms in the Celtic Sea can be revealed

The Crown Estate has confirmed the selection of Equinor and a joint venture between EDF Renewables º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and ESB – Gwynt Glas – as preferred bidders to deliver the new floating windfarms follows the conclusion of its leasing round five.

The floating windfarm from Gwynt Glas is in Welsh waters off the west Wales coast, while the project from Equinor will be off the coast of Cornwall.

Each bidder will pay an annual option fee of £350 per megawatt, or £525,000 per year in total.

However, the process for licensing a third floating offshore windfarm, straddling both English and Welsh waters, failed to secure a successful bidder.

The Crown Estate insisted that it will deliver on the full potential capacity through the deployment of a third site and expects to set out steps by the end of September. It is not clear whether it could develop the scheme itself.

The process, as it stands, will deliver 3 GW in offshore wind capacity, short of its original 4.5 GW target.

Three projects would generate the electricity needs for more than hour million homes and create more than 5,000 direct and supply chain jobs, creating a £1.5bn economic boost.