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Proposals for Green Port Hull to work beyond wind as application lodged to widen scope

Future marine engineering requirements of carbon capture and storage plans form part of the proposal

Siemens Gamesa's blade plant at Green Port Hull.(Image: Siemens Gamesa)

Plans have been unveiled to widen the use of Hull's biggest recent waterfront development.

The £310m Green Port Hull project transformed Alexandra Dock to pave the way for the Siemens Gamesa offshore wind turbine blade manufacturing facility which opened in December 2016.

As well as the factory itself, the site is used to assemble turbine components before they are shipped to wind farms in the North Sea.

Read more: Centrica puts £1.6b East Yorkshire hydrogen plan at heart of response to Chancellor's COP26 plea

Construction work recently started on an expansion of the blade factory as part of a further £186m investment by Siemens Gamesa which is set to create 200 new jobs

Now the company has submitted a planning application to vary a condition of the original approval for the scheme to allow for a wider range of business uses.

If given the go-ahead, it would allow around 10 per cent of the site to be made available for additional uses involving new low carbon and renewable industries, temporary berths for marine vessels and general marine engineering activity.

The 7.5 hectare site earmarked for other uses is mainly reclaimed land created as part of the wider Green Port Hull development.