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PRIVACY
Opinion

The Celtic Sea has huge potential for floating offshore wind energy providing we get the infrastructure right

Director of Renewableº£½ÇÊÓÆµ Cymru Rhys Wyn Jones says 5GW of FOW could be deployable in the Celtic Sea by 2040.

Floating offshore wind

In the last decade, floating offshore wind (FOW) technology has developed rapidly.

So there will be significant industry interest in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s recently published budget for the 4th allocation round of its ‘Contracts for Difference’ programme - which ringfences £24m of support for FOW projects between FYs 2025/6 and 2028/9.

While this will be encouraging for domestic investment, FOW is also evolving rapidly internationally – with Spain, France, and Norway among those with significant plans to deploy FOW at scale.

Welsh Government sees FOW as an enabler for net zero which can also deliver high-quality sustainable employment and export opportunities.

And the Celtic Sea is one of the areas of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ which has richest promise.

According to the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, around 5GW of FOW could be deployable in the Celtic Sea by 2040.

Furthermore, in a report published today at a FOW conference being held in Aberdeen, the Floating Offshore Wind Centre of Excellence (FoW CoE), suggests over half the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s required 100GW of offshore wind by 2050 could be floating – delivering £43.6bn in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ gross value add (GVA) and creating nearly 30,000 jobs.

This leads to another debate around ensuring ‘early’ FOW projects give local supply chains a head start to get ready for the larger scale projects which will follow.