Tyne's role in major milestone of Sofia Offshore Wind Farm construction

Posted on 25 October 2024

Tyne's role in major milestone of Sofia Offshore Wind Farm construction
Dutch firm Van Oord is using the Port of Tyne's Clean Energy Park as a staging post for its work on the 100-turbine site in the North Sea

A key milestone has been reached in the building of a £3bn offshore wind farm, with the North East playing a key part in its early stages.

More than a quarter of the Sofia farm's foundations have been installed in the Dogger Bank zone of the North Sea, with many of the components for the huge development having been delivered from the Port of Tyne, where Dutch firm Van Oord is staging much of its work on the project.

The marine contractor is working for Sofia developer RWE and has been using part of the port's 200-acre Clean Energy Park as a base for storage. Its deep water quay has hosted the firm's Aoelus vessel, the tallest offshore installation vessel to have ever visited the Port. It has a crane boom height of 155 metres and is 175 metres long, equivalent to more than 14 double decker buses.

The 100 turbine Sofia farm is scheduled to be operational from 2026, and once completed will be roughly the same size as the Isle of Man, with the capacity to meet the electricity needs of 1.2m UK homes. Van Oord has been managing the engineering, procurement, construction and installation of the foundations and inter-array cables for the project, with each foundation measuring between 80 to 90 metres in length and weighing between 1,200 to 1,550 tonnes.

Its engineers on the Tyne have also taken delivery of external platforms, boat landings and ladders which have come from Poland. This year, Van Oord’s cable-laying vessel Calypso and trencher Dig-it have installed array cables manufactured in Greece and stored at the Port of Blyth, where the firm also has a base.

Matt Beeton, CEO at the Port of Tyne, said: "Since partnering with Van Oord earlier this year, real strides have been made in their construction of Sofia, accelerating the region’s path towards a clean energy future. Projects like this are key to achieving the UK’s 2030 clean energy goals, and the North East is perfectly placed to support in the development of these sites, with our direct access to the North Sea.

"It’s why we’ve developed our Tyne Clean Energy Park, which has been earmarked for renewable energy production tenants, while supporting our intentionally ambitious vision for a cleaner, greener future, both for the Port and wider region."

Matthew Swanwick, project director for Sofia Offshore Wind Farm, said: "Seeing the first foundations being installed at sea is a hugely symbolic moment in the construction of every wind farm. The Sofia project is around fourteen years in the making and the construction phase has around two further years yet to go.

"Achievements like this make it all worthwhile. We are proud to help build an industry that produces sustainable power at best cost to the consumer, while delivering regional economic growth."

Source: BusinessLive (https://www.business-live.co.uk/economic-development/tynes-role-major-milestone-sofia-30228317?utm_source=businesslive_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=auto_northeast_newsletter&utm_content=&utm_term=&ruid=8672afbb-54fc-4e39-89c5-0946bb3c17e9)

Loading...