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Ports & Logistics

Port of Blyth benefits from early start in renewable energy sector

Northumberland port has seen three years of record results after being one of the first to see the promise of the green economy

Port of Blyth chief executive Martin Lawlor(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)

When Martin Lawlor first joined the Port of Blyth in the late 1990s the renewable energy sector was only just beginning to take shape in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and the port’s prime source of income was the paper trade.

Jump forward to 2024 and there are now no less than 52 companies based around the estuary linked to the clean energy sector, with the cluster helping Northumberland to punch well above its weight in the growing sector. The port recently unveiled record results for a third consecutive year, boosting turnover to £31.5m and operating profit to £3.9m thanks to its work as one the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest offshore energy support bases.

The last 12 months have seen it mobilise two of the world’s largest offshore wind farms, providing significant vessel and onshore handling activity, while also being involved in specialist sub-sea equipment, heavy project lifts and support for the decommissioning sector. The level of activity is a far cry from the port’s revenue earners when Mr Lawlor, who was appointed CEO in 2006, first arrived at the port as commercial director.

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He said: “When I first came here we were a paper port – almost everything we did was paper coming in from Scandinavia, and I was brought in to generate some new trade because we were coming close to when we knew we were going to lose that trade. The paper firm wanted to go through a single port, and with the best will in the world they were never going to use Blyth for the whole of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.”

Mr Lawlor had been looking at emerging trends and sectors that the port could tap into, and – alongside creating the container service and some work in scrap metal – he could see that wind turbines could become a strong opportunity. Onshore wind turbines were, at the time, being developed for the Scottish Borders and the North of England.

He said: “I had seen things in the trade press and thought clearly there’s something here. The board said I needed to generate new trade that didn’t require warehousing – that warehousing was soon to become empty when the paper trade went – so they said ‘help us to get into wind turbines’. It was almost the origins of what we do today.”