Responding to David Kidney’s announcement of up to £4.8m to accelerate R&D and drive down costs in offshore wind, Director General of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) said:
“While we welcome this new research centre as a much-needed step towards progressing wind technology in a more financially sustainable way, we need much more significant action to expand this key sector.
“Exploiting our offshore energy resources will be essential for the UK to have any hope of meeting future energy demand in an environmentally sustainable way. We face significant challenges in future electricity supply with the impending closure of coal and nuclear power stations and the urgent need for de-carbonisation of the energy sector. Wind, wave and tidal energy can provide a clean source of energy as well as boosting the economy, with the potential to create thousands of new jobs and put the UK at the forefront of a potentially booming industry.
“However, we must act now to ensure we have the workforce to deliver it and a secure environment within which industry can invest, including clarity around funding and regulation. We must also look beyond wind and realise the potential of wave and tidal energy – these resources, together with offshore wind, have the potential to provide up to half of the UK’s energy needs.”
ICE released a report exploring the potential for the UK’s offshore resources today. Please go to www.ice.org.uk/downloads/offshore.pdf to download full report, both ICE and DECC press releases below.
18 March 2010 - Press Release - Kidney - UK offshore wind towers above the rest
- Up to £4.8m to accelerate R&D and drive down costs in offshore wind
- UK ’s first training tower for offshore wind opens in Blyth
The offshore wind supply chain got a double boost today as David Kidney, Minister for Energy and Climate Change, announced a major extension of the programme worth up to £4.8m, and opened the UK’s first training tower for offshore wind.
The Offshore Wind Accelerator is a unique research and development collaboration between the Carbon Trust and leading offshore wind developers that focuses on developing innovative technologies that have real potential to cut the cost of future wind farm developments.
David Kidney MP, who was in the North East to meet representatives from business and education to discuss skills and green jobs said:
“Fighting climate change and ensuring our energy security is a challenge, but it’s also a massive opportunity - an opportunity for skills, jobs and investment. Research and development, and giving people the skills to build offshore wind farms will be vital to keeping the UK ahead of the world.
“As we build larger wind farms, in deeper waters, further from shore, we must work with industry to find and develop vital new technologies. The funding I’m announcing today will help companies drive down costs and share resources, which will benefit the entire industry here in the UK.”
The Minister applauded the new training tower at the New and Renewable Energy Centre (NAREC) in Blyth, as he watched students from Northumberland College demonstrate the facility. He said:
“I’m really impressed with this brilliant new training facility. It will help people from the North East and across the UK to get the skills they need to help us generate more clean, green and secure wind energy.”
Tom Delay, Chief Executive, the Carbon Trust said:
“Today’s announcement shows the commitment to the Carbon Trust’s Offshore Wind Accelerator and provides confidence in its ability to drive cost out of offshore wind deployment. We have seen many promising concepts and innovative solutions to the technology challenges that the offshore wind industry faces as it moves further offshore and this additional funding will help to scale up our activity and enable us to continue to drive costs out of this key technology.”