Pentland floating offshore wind project secures institutional backing

A major floating offshore wind project in Scotland has secured significant investment from the National Wealth Fund (NWF), Great British Energy (GBE) and the Scottish National Investment Bank supporting the UK’s clean energy ambitions, bolstering energy security and supporting  jobs.   

Investors have each acquired an initial shareholding to participate in the development of Pentland Floating Offshore Wind Farm, off the coast of Dounreay, Caithness. Once operational, it will have capacity to generate enough green electricity to power up to 70, 000 homes.  

The project, being developed by Highland Wind Limited, is majority owned by Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners P/S (CIP). It will use a number of innovative technologies to help accelerate the industrialisation of floating offshore wind (FLOW) while delivering significant benefits to the local economy. More than 1,000 jobs are expected to be created and supported throughout construction and operation.  

This investment demonstrates how public finance institutions can work together to support early-stage technologies within the clean energy sector, aiming to ‘crowd in’ private capital in support of the government’s growth and clean energy missions. 

This also signals confidence in the UK’s floating offshore wind sector, encouraging engineering firms, especially in Scotland, to pivot from oil and gas and prepare to compete in a growing market. 

FLOW projects hold huge potential for the UK’s energy market, which has been identified as the top market in terms of readiness for investment and as an area of strategic importance for UK supply chain development. 

Scotland has the offshore wind capacity to deliver 40GW of electricity, which is enough to power millions of homes while creating jobs and boosting the economy. Floating offshore wind farms are critical to realising this opportunity. They can be developed in locations where fixed turbines aren’t viable, and they represent 60 per cent of the potential energy pipeline.  

Nischal Agarwal

Nischal Agarwal, Partner in CIP, said: 

“Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) is committed to playing a full role in helping to deliver the UK Government’s Clean Power 2030 vision, and we are delighted to welcome NWF, GBE and the Scottish National Investment Bank as new partners to our Pentland Floating Offshore Wind project.

FLOW holds significant potential to innovate, reduce its technology costs, and establish a world leading UK supply chain capable of enabling scale-able low carbon power generation to meet future growth in electricity demand”. 

Dan McGrail, CEO of Great British Energy, said: 

"This is just the beginning of our investment strategy and will help bring good, skilled jobs to the Scottish Highlands. 

"I am pleased to work with the National Wealth Fund, the Scottish National Investment Bank and the Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners on this project - this sets out our aspiration to become the UK government’s energy developer. 

“It also reflects GBE’s ambition, capability, and commitment to making the UK a clean energy superpower." 

Previous
Previous

Smart Grid deal offers prospect of UK’s first all electric town

Next
Next

Affordable energy charity strikes wind farm deal for Argyll and Bute communities