Wind turbines in Aberdeen Bay

Vattenfall commissions wind turbines with the world's largest capacity

On 1 July 2018, wind turbines with the world's largest capacity were taken into operation at Vattenfall's offshore wind farm Aberdeen Bay. One single rotor lap from the record 8.8 MW turbine provides a British household with electricity for a full day.

The Aberdeen Bay wind farm, or EOWDC (European Offshore Wind Deployment Center), is Vattenfall's development center for offshore wind power. At the same time, Aberdeen Bay is Scotland´s largest wind farm that will produce electricity to approximately 80,000 British households (312 GWh) every year.

Gunnar Groebler, Head of Business Area Wind at Vattenfall, says: “The fact that EOWDC now can start delivering electricity after a very short construction time is satisfactory. A sincere “thank you” to all people involved, both from Vattenfall and from our partners for making it happen. Now Vattenfall is given the opportunity to continue to push forward the development of tomorrow's wind power technology, thus helping our customers to live fossil-free within a generation.”

At EOWDC, essentially two areas will be studied:
* New wind power technology
* How the marine life is affected by wind farms


The future wind power technology is being tested at Aberdeen Bay, which is one of the first testing facilities of its kind. The aim is to accelerate the development of the wind power industry into competitive renewable electricity generation. The eleven wind turbines, two 8.8 MW and nine 8.4 MW, have the largest turbine capacity in commercial operation in the world. One single rotor lap from the record 8.8 MW turbine provides a British household with electricity for a full day.
The technology for building the foundations of the turbine towers is new. Instead of using traditional monopiles (hollow steel tubes), a new technique has been used at Aberdeen Bay; so-called suction buckets. The method is basically silent and therefore the disturbance of wildlife at sea are minimized.

For studies of marine wildlife around wind farms, EOWDC has received EUR 0.5 million in support from the EU. Dolphins, salmon, sea trout and sea birds belong to the species to be studied at the wind farm.

Facts EOWDC
Installed capacity: 93.2 MW
Annual production: 312 GWh
Number of wind turbines: 11
Capacity turbines: 8.8 MW (2), 8.4 MW (9)
Investment cost: EUR 350 million

For more information, contact:
Vattenfall Press Office +46 8 739 5010, press@vattenfall.com

See also

Nordlicht Monopile Installation

Vattenfall starts offshore construction of Germany’s largest offshore wind project

Vattenfall has reached an important milestone in the construction of the Nordlicht offshore wind cluster: on July 1st, the first monopile for the Nordlicht I offshore wind farm was installed...

Read the full article
Wind turbines on a forested hillside under a partly cloudy sky.

Aberdeenshire wind farm delivering more than renewable power: lower‑emission construction and local benefits

Construction of Vattenfall’s Clashindarroch II onshore wind farm near Huntly is demonstrating how renewable energy projects can reduce emissions across their full lifecycle while delivering ...

Read the full article
Ulrika Ritzén, Anna Borg, Markys Kyllenbeck and Martin Lundstedt standing on a stage at Bruzaholm's wind farm in Eksjö Municipality.

Collaboration and competitiveness in focus at Bruzaholm’s inauguration

The onshore wind farm in Bruzaholm has been inaugurated, marking a step forward for fossil-free electricity and strengthening regional electricity supply, flexibility and competitiveness.

Read the full article