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Siemens installs two offshore platforms for TenneT in the North Sea in July

By Nic Sharpley | July 23, 2014

Siemens says the first four North Sea platforms will supply around three million German households with electricity.

Siemens says the first four North Sea platforms will supply around three million German households with electricity.

Siemens has installed a fourth offshore platform in the North Sea, completing an important stage for grid connections of sea-based wind farms. This is the platform for the SylWin1 DC link, which is the most powerful of the four offshore wind power grid connections contracted to Siemens by the German-Dutch transmission grid operator TenneT between 2010 and 2011. Only a few days prior to this, Siemens installed the third platform at sea for the HelWin2 grid connection. In all, Siemens is implementing five North Sea grid connection projects for TenneT. The first four grid connections, whose platforms have now been installed at sea, are scheduled to take up commercial operation successively between the second half of 2014 and the first half of 2015. The fifth grid connection, which was contracted earlier this year, is slated to go on-line in 2019.

The newly installed SylWin1 platform with a capacity of 864 megawatts (MW) and located 70 km to the west of the island Sylt, after which the project was named, will concentrate the wind power produced by the three North Sea wind farms Dan Tysk, Butendiek and Sandbank and transmit the electricity to land. This platform, with dimensions of 83 x 56 x 26 meters (length x width x height) is the largest converter platform installed to date worldwide. With its baseframe, the platform has a total weight of 25,000 tons. Only a few days before this, Siemens also erected the HelWin2 platform (690 MW) 35 km north of the island of Helgoland. The HelWin1 platform (576 MW) was installed in August 2013 adjacently. The BorWin2 platform (800 MW) was installed by Siemens in April 2014 northwest of the island of Borkum. These four grid connections will have a total transmission capacity of more than 2.9 gigawatts (GW), with enough wind power to supply around three million households. The fifth grid connection, BorWin3 (900 MW), which was ordered this year, is scheduled to supply wind power to a further 900,000 households starting in 2019.

Using the Siemens technology installed on the platforms, the alternating current power generated by the wind turbines is transformed into direct current for efficient transmission onto land. At the associated land-based station the electricity from the linked wind farms will be converted back into the alternating current power required for feeding into the grid. Thanks to the low-loss high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) technology used here, transmission losses are less than four percent. The platforms are designed for decades of operation in the rugged North Sea and are fully automated. The platforms for the SylWin1, HelWin1 and BorWin2 projects were manufactured by Nordic Yards under contract by Siemens in the shipyards in Wismar and Warnemünde. The HelWin2 platform was constructed by the Dutch company Heerema. Petrofac, a general contractor active in the oil and gas industry, is responsible for the design, manufacture, transport and installation of the BorWin3 platform. The subsea and land-based cables for all of the projects were supplied by the Italian cable specialist Prysmian.

HVDC solutions and the associated service are part of the Siemens environmental portfolio. Around 43 percent of the company’s revenues are provided by green products and solutions. That makes Siemens one of the world’s leading providers of eco-friendly technology.

Siemens
www.siemens.com


Filed Under: News, Offshore wind, Projects
Tagged With: siemens
 

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