Huge Swedish offshore wind farm could use 22MW turbines: Freja CEO
Mainstream-Hexicon tie-up in consultation document for 2GW Cirrus wind farm even keeps option open for machines with up to 30MW rating
Freja Offshore sees using 20-22MW turbines as the “best estimate” for its gigascale Cirrus project off southern Sweden, CEO Magnus Hallman said, although the developer in a consultation document for the wind farm is keeping its options open to even use machines with a rating of up to 30MW.
The Mainstream Renewable Power and Hexicon tie-up is seeking a permit for the 2GW project in the country’s economic zone Baltic Sea at about 50km southeast of Karlskrona.
“The mention of 30MW turbines should therefore be noted in the context of capturing what could be made available to the market in the future.
“Our best estimate (at this point in time) lies in using turbines in the range of 20-22MW.”
As a result of current size increases in wind turbines, “it is expected that 30MW units with a rotor diameter of 330 meters will be launched between 2025 and 2030,” Freja said in the consultation document for Cirrus.
"Regarding turbine manufacturers, we will evaluate all relevant options that best suit our development needs at the appropriate time," he said.
The maximum height of turbines at Cirrus is stated at 370 meters, with rotor diameter 340 meters if installed power were to be 30MW at each of the 85 wind turbines, the company said in the document. If the array were to use 15MW machines only, 133 of them would be needed, Freja said.
Freja will probably try to stay below the maximum heights, though.
“We will endeavour to stay below 300-metre turbine heights to not interfere with the regular flight zones (where the low-level flight zone is below 300m) of the Swedish armed forces, a key stakeholder to our development,” Hallman added.