The past week has seen Team Humber Marine Alliance chairman and chief executive Mark O鈥橰eilly step down. David Laister caught up with him after a decade at the helm of a journey that has taken the Humber from a major player in the 海角视频鈥檚 blue economy to green powerhouse too.

鈥淗ornsea was this mythical thing, something of that scale, we wondered would it ever happen? I remember going to planning meetings in Immingham and giving evidence of what impact it could have - the supply chain - and it is happening now and working.鈥

Mark O鈥橰eilly has seen it on his watch. An ambassador, a collaborator, a Humber champion and champion networker - bringing key parties together over common goals.

His departure from the bridge of Team Humber Marine Alliance to an executive cabin down the passageway has drawn tributes from many quarters, for while Orsted and Siemens Gamesa have been the big names taking huge strides, support and sustaining the surge has been part and parcel of the second day job for him and others.

鈥淚t was February-March time when I first talked to the board,鈥 he said of plotting his departure, announced on Tuesday. 鈥淚 said 10 years, I had it in my mind, and it gives the opportunity for fresh blood, and allows me a new challenge too.

鈥淚 came back after a break in the new year to instigate it, but then Covid kicked in and it was full on about how we dealt with that.

鈥淚t has been an amazing journey. Offshore Wind Connections (the annual conference that has gone from an audience of 50 to 500 in eight years) - has always provided me with a time for reflection, and we鈥檝e not had that, but one thing that has always struck me is that we - as members and as the Humber - have always had ambition, and we鈥檝e marched on.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen companies get involved in projects here, and even though they are now finished - or operational - they鈥檝e moved elsewhere, perhaps not working in the Humber.

鈥淚t is an unusual situation, and can be difficult to get across for some people. We started talking about a global industry five or six years ago, and now it certainly is that.鈥

The shift in interest as the 海角视频 - dragged forward by the Humber opportunity - emerged as the 海角视频 leader.

鈥淚n 2013 we went on a few missions, we took in Germany, Bremerhaven and Esbjerg, Denmark, and people were blown away with what they saw,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hat has then been done here, we have had the US here, and we developed an amazing relationship, resulting in not only companies doing work there, but the likes of GEV and Boston Energy setting up new HQs and creating 175 jobs between them.

鈥淲e had the twinning with New Bedford and Grimsby - amazing.

Mark O'Reilly, as caricature and ambassador, on the Humber stand at Global Offshore Wind exhibition and reading about Hornsea offshore wind farm's physical arrival - the world's largest offshore wind farm.
Mark O'Reilly, as caricature and ambassador, on the Humber stand at Global Offshore Wind exhibition and reading about Hornsea offshore wind farm's physical arrival - the world's largest offshore wind farm.

鈥淚t has felt like a million things happening over the period, and people still want to come and see what we鈥檝e done - China, Japan, South Korea all interested as they develop too.鈥

For Mark, the work on skills to feed into the burgeoning industry has sat side-by-side with the efforts on economic development - the beauty pageants and technical backing to attract vital inward investment.

鈥淲e would like to have had a turbine facility and a tower facility by now, and I鈥檓 pleased with what is still going on, but I鈥檓 delighted with the skills piece,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was simply no skills support for offshore wind training in this part of the world. Hota, HFRC - essentially the fire brigade - Boston Energy, Siemens, Maersk, Catch and Modal, they鈥檝e done it.

鈥淎 national training centre for Siemens Gamesa at North Lindsey College, where I was a governor for four years, and helping set up UTC Scutnhorpe, a facility also now thriving.鈥

Of the investment, with big successes such as the operations and maintenance cluster, headed by Orsted鈥檚 拢14 million world leading East Coast Hub and the Hull blade plant, he said: 鈥淚 spent a lot of time working with Able - on the marine energy park - and it looks like that is now coming through, then there has been the research and development investment - the Aura facility and fantastic Ergo Centre, and now the Offshore Renewable Energy Operations and Maintenance Centre of Excellence in Grimsby.鈥

The Humber will very soon have 5GW of installed capacity in offshore wind, with a clear pathway to 10GW in the established rounds, and more to come from The Crown Estate and the industry with the sector deal also maturing.

The Offshore Wind Connections event is a source of particular pride as a showcase from Team Humber, as it scaled up too.

Maf Smith, Renewable 海角视频 deputy chief executive, with Team Humber Marine Alliance chairman and chief executive, Mark O'Reilly.
Maf Smith, Renewable 海角视频 deputy chief executive, with Team Humber Marine Alliance chairman and chief executive, Mark O'Reilly.

鈥淚t was here, in the Humber, at the sharp end, not in Manchester or London, here, and we made it informative and inspirational, and there was some great collaboration we did.鈥

Team Humber - led by Mark and faithful right hand woman Mary Green - worked closely with the likes of national trade body Renewable海角视频, it welcomed Lord Prescott, brought the top tiers of Orsted, Siemens Gamesa, Innogy (RWE) and others to the lectern.

鈥淲hen we started out I鈥檇 look at the audience and know every single person - but it soon changed,鈥 he said.

One particular year will go down as a vintage. In 2012 the event opened on the same day Siemens signed up for Green Port Hull, prompting something of a party. 鈥淭hat was really quite surreal鈥 he said, with the mood such that you sensed many could have walked across the river to Forest Pines, such was the momentum.

While renewables has been a focus, there has been strong work on the pure maritime sector too. The Humber Ports Group drew together DFDS, ABP, GBA and PD Ports, developing the industrial strategy to feed into regional government, via North East Lincolnshire Council, while also showcasing the offer and encouraging importers to look north and avoid the congested south.

鈥淭he blue economy, the business of the sea, was what Team Humber Marine Alliance was all about - now there are freeports to explore.

鈥淭he renewables cluster has developed, and is developing again now too,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to some specific project work, zero carbon port aspirations, and more to come hopefully - it really has been an amazing journey.鈥