Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website Offshore wind installations stabilise in 2014 following record figures the previous year
february 12, 2015 - Ewea

Offshore wind installations stabilise in 2014 following record figures the previous year

The European offshore wind industry saw new capacity installations decline by 84 MW (5.34%) in 2014 as the sector stabilised following record figures the previous year.

In 2014, 408 new offshore turbines were fully grid connected, adding 1,483 MW to the European system. The total installed capacity for Europe now stands at 8,045MW in 74 offshore wind farms in 11 European countries.
Justin Wilkes, deputy chief executive officer of the European Wind Energy Association, said: "It is not surprising that we see a levelling-off of installations in 2014 following a record year in 2013. The industry has seen exponential growth in the early part of this decade and this is a natural stabilising of that progress. Offshore wind will have a monumental part to play in the EU's energy security drive as part of the European Energy Union but it is political determination that will help Europe unlock its offshore wind potential."
He added: "The technology and financing are there but we need policymakers to come forward with stable long-term plans to push the growth of this industry and to avoid stop-go and inconsistent policy frameworks for offshore wind."

In 2014, the UK accounted for over half of all new installations (54.8%) with Germany in second (35.7%) and Belgium (9.5%) making up the rest. But for 2015, Germany is expected to install more offshore capacity than the UK, which has dominated installations in Europe for the past three years.
Wilkes said: "Germany is set to buck the trend this year. The UK has more installed offshore capacity than the rest of the world combined but this year shows that other countries in the EU are making serious investments in the sector. The nine financial deals closed in 2014, of which 4 were "billion-Euro" projects, suggest that activity will pick up substantially as of 2017 as these projects begin to hit the water."
The largest wind farms to be fully completed will be RWE's Gwynt y Mor (576MW) in North Wales followed by Global Tech 1 (400MW) in the German North Sea.

Related news

february 24, 2016
january 22, 2016
january 18, 2016

Press release available only in original language. Emerging opportunities in American wind power will be on display at this year’s...

January 21, 2016Washington, D.C. — After seven years of promoting the benefits of adding wind #energy to the U.S. electricity mix,...

WISE Power -- an EU-funded project -- is launching an online tool for onshore wind farm developers and industry stakeholders to en...

You might be interested in

december 15, 2015

The European Wind Energy Association greatly welcomes the UN climate change agreement struck in Paris on Saturday 12 December.The ...