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Orsted brings forward multi-billion pound Hornsea Four offshore wind farm

600 sq km of seabed being investigated for 180 turbine addition to the Humber cluster as work begins with communities in East Yorkshire

Hornsea Project Four plans are at formal community consultation stage(Image: Orsted)

Renewables giant Orsted is bringing forward the final wind farm in its allocated zone off the Humber.

Hornsea Four, with the potential to generate upwards of 1.8GW, is entering formal consultation tomorrow, with a series of information events to be hosted next month.

A Round Three project in The Crown Estate’s seabed leasing strategy, Hornsea One and Two are already under construction, with the first having already unofficially brought the ‘world’s largest’ title to Grimsby, where they will be operated and maintained from.

Hornsea Three is currently awaiting a consent decision from the new Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Andrea Leadsom.

Hornsea One - the world's largest wind farm in waiting - has reached the halfway point in commissioning, with 87 of the 174 turbines now generating. It is operated and maintained out of Grimsby.(Image: Orsted)

Ørsted, fresh from announcing a 2 per cent increase in earnings in its half yearly results, is now investigating an offshore area of up to 600 sq km for the latest project, where up to 180 turbines could be located. It is a zone that stretches almost the entire length of the East Yorkshire coastline, and the northernmost turbines would be 65km off Flamborough Head. It would sit well beyond the company’s first farm in the region, Westermost Rough, but nearer to shore than those now being built.

Jamie Baldwin, project development manager at Ørsted, said: “The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ has world-leading capabilities in offshore wind. By 2030, one third of British electricity is set to be produced by offshore wind power and Ørsted is at the forefront of this green energy revolution. As the global leader in offshore wind, we take our responsibilities to the communities in which we build and operate our projects very seriously.”

Power is proposed to hit land close to the village of Barmston, between Bridlington and Hornsea, with a cable route dropping south west, skirting Beverley to an onshore substation north of Hull, close to where the A1079 and A164 meet, where it would connect to the National Grid.

It would also feature energy balancing infrastructure, potentially a form of battery storage.