º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Ports & Logistics

Vessels to match offshore wind's green credentials as next generation fleet sets sail for Grimsby

Battery-powered boats will hook up to pilot smart buoy feeding off wind farm's electricity

(Image: Orsted)

The first hybrid crew transfer vessels are heading to the Humber.

Ørsted is to welcome a fleet of three battery-supported boats to serve Hornsea Two offshore wind farm’s construction.

It comes as the huge inward investor was named as the world’s most sustainable energy company for a third successive year.

The company has worked alongside Sweden's Northern Offshore Services and Denmark's MHO-Co to develop the innovative vessels which will take around four hours to travel to site, from Grimsby.

They will also carry Dutch company Z-Bridge’s newly developed motion compensated transfer system, called Bring-to-Work - a trolley lift that replaces the step off and climb for technicians.

Jan Stilling, lead marine specialist for Ørsted said: “The new CTV’s have incorporated large battery capacity that makes it possible to stay offshore overnight in hybrid mode meaning they’re not burning fuel for up to eight hours while the vessels keep their positions without anchoring or mooring to a buoy.

“The new gangways will work as additional support for the extra access required during construction on site.”

NOS will take delivery of the 39-metre Energizer this spring, and MHO-Co is due to deliver two 35-metre CTVs in the summer.