North Sea Countries Partner Up to Lower Offshore Wind Cost

The Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Denmark, Ireland, Sweden and Norway have vowed to collaborate in terms of planning and constructing offshore wind farms.

Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs, Henk Kamp, is the initiator of the cooperation, under which the countries will also investigate other technologies for generating renewable energy at the North Sea. The nine North Sea countries will ratify a cooperation agreement at the Energy Council meeting today in Luxembourg.

While collaboration will reduce building costs, it also involves looking at whether national regulations for grid management, subsidies and permits could be better harmonised. Additionally, research will be conducted into how to better coordinate national requirements for the offshore wind sector in terms of safety or the environment.

This process will explicitly involve interested parties such as social organisations, knowledge institutions, nature organisations, network managers and the business community.

Minister Henk Kamp said: “Collaborating more effectively will enable us to construct wind farms in the North Sea at a lower cost. The coming years will see the construction of several big wind farms in the North Sea, including five big farms in the Netherlands. This will contribute to an overall increase in the proportion of renewable energy in Europe, rising to 20% in 2020. Despite the scale of construction, there is still a great deal of space available in the North Sea. In collaboration with other countries, we are investigating what more can be done post 2020 and in the run-up to and period after 2030, as we wholly expect that the amount of wind energy will continue to show substantial growth in Europe.”

One possibility is that future wind farms located close to each other in the various neighbouring countries will be connected via one single electricity cable from the sea to the land instead of a separate cable for each country.

An additional goal is to use the infrastructure created by the construction of the offshore wind farms as a basis for further interconnection and market integration between the countries in the North Sea region. This would mean that a shortage of renewable energy in one country could be better compensated by a surplus in the other, resulting in cheaper energy for European citizens.