Scotland Invites Manufacturers to Homeport at Floating Wind Port Cluster

Scotland’s Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) has partnered with Scottish Development International (SDI) and the Department for International Trade (DIT) to launch a global initiative to attract overseas manufacturing companies of scale to the Scottish Floating Wind Port Cluster.

Image for illustrative purpose only; Kincardine Floating Wind Farm in Scotland; Source: Cobra Group / Principle Power

The main target of this international initiative under the DIT’s High Potential Opportunities (HPO) programme is to attract inward investors from across the globe to help manufacture the main components for future floating wind projects offshore Scotland.

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The Scottish Floating Wind Port Cluster comprises the ports in the Cromarty and Moray Firths identified through the Strategic Investment Assessment report which came out in December 2021.

This independent report, commissioned by the Scottish Government and led by University of Strathclyde Principal, Professor Sir Jim McDonald, identified the ports in the Cromarty and Moray Firths – Port of Nigg, Port of Cromarty Firth, Ardersier Port, and the Port of Inverness – as the nucleus of the cluster.

Companies interested in manufacturing substructures, up to 100 metres in diameter and anywhere from 3,000-6,000 tonnes in weight, along with the various other components required, will be invited to visit these ports and engage with HIE and the Scottish Government to explore the potential for creating a floating wind manufacturing hub in the Highlands.

The overseas manufacturing companies will also be invited to engage directly with the Scottish supply chain through the HIE-led DeepWind offshore wind cluster, and its 700 members.

The Scottish Floating Wind Port Cluster is also expected to be the focus of significant job creation as the floating wind industry develops in Scotland to deliver the projects in the ScotWind leasing round as well as the latest round aimed at decarbonising the oil and gas facilities in the North Sea, the Innovation and Targeted Oil and Gas (INTOG) round.

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With 15 GW of floating wind in the ScotWind round, 5 GW in the INTOG round, and a further potential 2 GW coming from the ScotWind Clearing Round, Scotland will have the largest floating wind market in the world.

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This 22 GW of floating wind will require over 1,200 floating substructures, almost five times more structures than delivered by the Oil and Gas Industry in the whole of the North Sea in the last four decades.

”Floating wind is the most significant opportunity to come to the Highland and Islands of Scotland since the development of oil and gas in the North Sea kicked off in the 1970s. These huge floating power stations will create thousands of long-term jobs in some of the most fragile areas of our economy and help us make the transition from fossil fuels to a more sustainable energy mix,” Stuart Black, CEO of HIE, said.

”The Highlands and Islands is in a prime position to capitalise on this massive opportunity, thanks to significant private and public investment in our ports over several years, transferrable skills and expertise from those working in the oil and gas sector, and an active and innovative supply chain across the region.”

Scotland is home to two of the three operating commercial floating wind farms, the 30 MW Hywind Scotland and the 50 MW Kincardine.

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