Orsted-led Scottish floating wind-power hydrogen pilot fires up with Ocergy engineering deal
Deepwater technology pioneer lands lead-off technical role to fine-tune its OCG-Wind platform design for 100MW 'stepping-stone' Salamander array in UK North Sea
The pioneering Salamander floating wind project off Scotland, being developed by Orsted with Simply Blue and offshore oil contractor Subsea7, has tapped Ocergy for lead-off engineering on foundation design for the 100MW “stepping-stone” project.
“From inception, the foundation manufacturing and assembly was a crucial element for us in delivering higher local content,” Huw Bell, Salamander’s project director, said. “OCG-Wind technology meets our requirements.
“We aim to provide access to double the number of Scottish port facilities over some traditional floating concepts due to lower draft.” He added the plaform’s “scalable fabrication and assembly process [is] suitable for commercial scale deployment as well as decreasing fabricated steel mass by around a third”.
Ocergy CEO Dominique Roddier said: “Salamander is of paramount importance for our consortium and the floating wind industry. This project will demonstrate that the premise of delivering one unit per week, week after week is achievable. This is the last major industry hurdle before the deployment of large, commercial-scale, floating wind projects.”
Ocergy was chosen for the role after an assessment by the developer consortium that ranged over the floating wind concept’s design, technical performance, fabrication, assembly, operations and installation on Salamander. The feasibility study will now progress to so-called pre-FEED [front end engineering design].