Turbine Installation Starts as MT Højgaard Completes Work on Lincs Wind Farm, UK

Turbine Installation Starts as MT Højgaard Completes Work on Lincs Wind Farm, UK

The foundations for the English Lincs Offshore Wind Farm have now been handed over to the client, who has begun to install the first wind turbines.

The foundations for green energy to 200,000 UK households are now in place. MT Højgaard has handed over the foundations for 75 offshore wind turbines for the Lincs Offshore Wind Farm off the east coast of England, and the first wind turbines have already been installed.

“We installed the last foundation in June, and in September our divers came up out of the water for the last time after completing all the final work,” says Kim Andersen, Director of Offshore at MT Højgaard.

The final work included fitting so-called J-tubes, which lead the cables from the wind turbines to the sub-stations. The J-tubes are installed using a crane from a jack-up vessel, but a diver is required to guide the equipment into place below the water surface.

“As with installing the foundations for the offshore wind turbines, the final work also includes being able to handle heavy gear with millimetre precision, and getting the logistics at sea to run perfectly,” says Kim R. Andersen.

Being market leader in offshore wind turbine foundations, MT Højgaard possesses all the competences required to ensure that design, planning, logistics and execution all take off together.

The company has demonstrated this particularly over the summer when, concurrently with completing its work on the Lincs Offshore Wind Farm, it has also installed the last of the 111 foundations for the Anholt Offshore Wind Farm, the biggest offshore wind farm in Denmark.

The foundations for both the Anholt and Lincs projects have been designed and executed with a conical grouted connection, which complies with the new regulations for calculating grout connections.

Lincs Offshore Wind Farm lies approximately eight kilometres from the coastal town of Skegness on the English east coast. First power from the 270 MW offshore wind farm was generated in August 2012 and the wind farm will be fully commissioned during 2013.

Each foundation consists of a monopile weighing between 320 and 480 tonnes which is driven into the seabed. A transition piece, which weighs approx. 290 tonnes, is then lowered onto the monopile; the wind turbine is then fitted onto the transition piece.

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Press release, September 19, 2012; Image: MT Højgaard