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Belfast Live
Belfast Live
National
Shauna Corr

Belfast only port in Ireland ready to build offshore wind turbines, according to new report

Belfast is the only port on the island of Ireland ready to build offshore wind turbines, according to a new report.

That's despite the Department for Economy providing no funding for the renewables sector, including wind and solar, over the past five years.

Wind Energy Ireland commissioned Gavin & Doherty Geosolutions to analyse Ireland's ability to construct the turbines it needs around its own shores.

Read more: Planners should be looking 200yrs ahead to protect Belfast from climate crisis

It found that in order to meet renewables and climate targets, the Republic of Ireland needs about 20GW of power from offshore wind by 2050 - that’s around 1,000 turbines. Northern Ireland's Energy Strategy, meanwhile contains a 70% renewables target by 2030.

But out of 13 ports and harbours they examined across the island, only Belfast is ready to build offshore wind farms.

Noel Cunniffe, CEO of Wind Energy Ireland, said: “We want to build Irish offshore wind farms in Irish ports. That is the best way to create jobs at home and to deliver offshore wind energy at the lowest possible price.

“But we cannot build 7 GW of offshore wind energy by the end of 2030 if we only have a single port on the island suitable for building offshore wind farms.”

The ports included in the report were Belfast D1, Belfast Harland & Wolff, Bremore, Cork Dockyard, Foynes Island, Galway, Killybegs, Larne, Moneypoint, Port of Cork (Ringaskiddy), Ros an Mhíl, Rosslare Europort and Shannon-Foynes.

“We need to be able to build more than one offshore wind project at the same time if we are to have any chance to deliver the carbon emissions cuts that the Government wants and that climate action requires,” added Mr Cunniffe.

“We know Minister Eamon Ryan is taking this seriously. But with only eight years to deliver 7 GW of offshore wind energy there is growing concern throughout industry that projects may have to be built from outside of Ireland or will need to wait for availability in Belfast.”

WEI says additional infrastructure is needed to meet climate obligations.

The report recommends state support to plug funding gaps through grants or loans, clarity on timescales to deliver offshore wind farms, better planning and the prioritisation of renewables applications to give Ireland the best chance of meeting its 2030 target.

Sarah Gibson, Principal Engineer with Gavin & Doherty Geosolutions and the report’s lead author, said: “Our ports have the ambition, the determination and the imagination to provide first-class infrastructure for the construction of offshore renewable energy projects.

“Ports like Rosslare, Cork Dockyard and Shannon-Foynes have already put in substantial work getting ready for offshore wind.

“Ireland can be a base from which to build a generation of fixed-bottom and floating wind energy projects, creating thousands of jobs and ensuring investment stays in Ireland.

“But it won’t just happen by itself. It will need Government, ports and renewable energy developers working together to make this ambition a reality.”

The report was co-funded by Wind Energy Ireland members Belfast Harbour, DP Energy, ESB, Inis Offshore Wind, Ocean Winds, Ørsted, Source Energie and RWE.

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