03 Jul 2015

Siemens receives order for offshore wind power

Siemens has received a further order for an offshore wind power plant located in Great Britain: Siemens is to supply, erect and commission 91 of its 6MW direct drive wind turbines with performance enhancing features enabling a capacity of up to approx. 580 MW in total. The wind turbines with a rotor diameter of 154 meters are slated for the Race Bank project of DONG Energy. Installation of the turbines is to commence during the spring of 2017.

Hamburg, Germany, 2015-Jul-03

  • Siemens to supply 91 wind turbines, each with a capacity of 6 megawatts
  • Order is part of the frame agreement with DONG Energy concluded in 2012
  • Race Bank wind power plant to have a total capacity of up to 580 megawatts
  • Service to be provided by Siemens and DONG Energy over a period of 5 years


This order is part of the frame agreement concluded between DONG Energy and Siemens in 2012. Service for the plant will be provided jointly by Siemens and DONG for a period of five years. When the Race Bank offshore wind power plant is completed at the beginning of 2018, it will have a capacity to supply approximately 400,000 British households with eco-friendly electricity.

The Race Bank offshore wind power plant will be erected around 32 kilometers off the
British eastern coast and will cover an area of 62 square kilometers. The wind turbines
will be erected on monopile foundations in water depths between 6 and 26 meters.
Race Bank is part of the second round for public tenders in Great Britain.

“We are pleased that DONG Energy has once again chosen our 6 MW direct drive
wind turbine, the workhorse for offshore wind power plants,” said Michael Hannibal,
CEO Offshore of the Wind Power and Renewables Division at Siemens. “We are
working hard to bring the costs of offshore wind energy down to make it competitive
with other sources of power generation.” Recent analysis show that our efforts are
paying off: in the last five years the costs of offshore wind has fallen by 11 percent,
according to study recently published by Renewable UK. “Thus, the offshore industry
is fully on track to meet the 2020 cost targets,” added Hannibal.

Siemens is working on several levers to bring the costs of offshore wind energy further down. The company wants to have technologies available already by 2020 which will make it possible to drive power generating costs from offshore wind down below 10 euro-cents per kilowatt-hour. Improvements are not only made at the turbine itself but also on innovating the vital grid connections: The high-voltage alternating-current (AC) transformer platforms used to date can in the future be replaced by a significantly smaller grid connection solution from Siemens based on alternating current technology. The considerable savings of this innovative solution in terms of both space and weight reduce costs substantially.

Siemens also offers cost-cutting solutions even while wind turbines are in operation: New types of purpose-built ships called Service Operation Vessels (SOV) form part of the logistics infrastructure ensuring more efficient maintenance operations and thereby significantly benefiting the availability of the offshore wind turbines. The offshore wind industry’s very first purpose-built SOVs were christened at end of June in Germany.

This press release is available at: www.siemens.com/press/PR2015070277WPEN

For further information on Division Wind Power and Renewables, please see: www.siemens.com/wind


Contact person for journalists:
Guy Dorrell
Phone: ++44 7808 823177
E-mail: guy.dorrell@siemens.com


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Siemens AG (Berlin and Munich)
is a global technology powerhouse that has stood for engineering excellence, innovation, quality, reliability and internationality for more than 165 years. The company is active in more than 200 countries, focusing on the areas of electrification, automation and digitalization. One of the world’s largest producers of energy-efficient, resource-saving technologies, Siemens is No. 1 in offshore wind turbine construction, a leading supplier of combined cycle turbines for power generation, a major provider of power transmission solutions and a pioneer in infrastructure solutions as well as automation, drive and software solutions for industry. The company is also a leading provider of medical imaging equipment – such as computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging systems – and a leader in laboratory diagnostics as well as clinical IT. In fiscal 2014, which ended on September 30, 2014, Siemens generated revenue from continuing operations of €71.9 billion and net income of €5.5 billion. At the end of September 2014, the company had around 343,000 employees worldwide on a continuing basis. Further information is available on the Internet at www.siemens.com.​


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