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Industry leaders in Cornwall call for Celtic Sea windfarms to land in the county

The Crown Estate, which manages the seabed around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, will invite energy companies to bid for leases to build the windfarms in the Celtic Sea later this summer

Industry leaders call for floating windfarms to be plugged in Cornwall(Image: Equinor)

Industry leaders in Cornwall are calling for floating windfarms off the coast, which could unlock green growth and create thousands of jobs, if power is landed directly in Cornwall.

The Crown Estate, which manages the seabed around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, will invite energy companies to bid for leases to build the windfarms in the Celtic Sea later this summer. The intention is to unlock 4GW of electricity by 2035, which is enough for three million homes, with potential for 24GW in the years to follow. The Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Local Enterprise Partnership has compared this to Hinkley Point C nuclear power station, which will bring 3.2GW when complete.

Industry leaders in Cornwall are now urging both The Crown Estate and the National Grid to bring at least 2GW ashore in Cornwall by 2030 as part of the first phase of Celtic Sea development.

Campaigners have said that the Duchy's existing electricity network is holding back the development and growth of industry, and the ability to ‘plug’ more green energy generation into the National Grid because it is 'so constrained.' An estimated 80% of potential renewables projects in Cornwall are having to wait until 2036 for a grid connection because of capacity constraints.

Read more: Ferries between Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly to receive £42m of private funding

In addition, concerns have been raised that the county could miss out if power from the first Celtic Sea turbines all lands in Wales of other parts of the South West.

Mark Duddridge, chair of the Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Local Enterprise Partnership, said: "If you think of the National Grid like your ring main at home, it basically ends in mid-Cornwall. This lack of capacity is holding back industries old and new, threatening to stifle jobs and investment, which is why we need urgent action.

"A direct 2GW connection from the first phase of the Celtic Sea would literally energise our economy and unlock industries that can play a vital role in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s energy transition, creating thousands of jobs. This includes mining critical minerals like lithium and tin, geothermal energy and methane capture, all of which are being pioneered in Cornwall.