º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Able remains commited to Humber port despite losing monopile manufacturer SeAH to Tees

Bitter blow was landed last week to marine energy park after MoU agreed in 2020 - first client Orsted also responds

Able Group executive chairman Peter Stephenson has spoken at length following the loss of SeAH to Teesport.(Image: Reach Plc / Able Group)

Able Group’s executive chairman has told how the company remains committed to developing a dedicated green energy port on the Humber, despite losing one of two major manufacturers it had lined up.

SeAH, the South Korean monopile producer, has switched plans for a plant - and 750 jobs - to Teesside, having revealed its intentions for Able Marine Energy Park back in September 2020.

It is understood the pace of development is a key reason, with greater support from the public purse to enable it also highlighted. Both are new freeport sites.

Read more: Orsted welcomes step change to accelerate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ offshore wind development

A disappointed Peter Stephenson, ironically based in the North East, has told how it will “inevitably delay the start of the project” - which had been anticipated for later this spring.

The passionate entrepreneur, who has had to endure a historic legal battle with Humber port operator ABP to finally land consent for a site he’d pieced together over several years, said: “The AMEP project needs to secure commitment from other key manufacturers. They, in turn, need to secure their own initial orders to justify their investment. Their immediate opportunity was within the soon-to-be-completed Contract for Differences allocation Round four process for 7GW of new installed offshore wind capacity.

“However, as things stand Siemens Gamesa – who supply blades from an existing º£½ÇÊÓÆµ facility, Hull - have had unprecedented success in this round, and at the significant expense of their competitors seeking to establish facilities at AMEP.

“Indirectly this has created a specific problem for SeAH, who have secured an order and need to start constructing their facilities in Q2 2022. However, we cannot commit to quay construction until we have a minimum of two key manufacturers to provide guaranteed income streams to support project viability.”