Crompton Greaves to set up power stations for E.ON’s UK offshore wind farm
12 Jan 2012
Crompton Greaves (CG), part of the Gautam Thapar led $4-bn Avantha Group, has been mandated to design, engineering, supply and install the onshore and offshore sub stations at the 219 MW Humber Gateway offshore wind farm in UK.
Humber Gateway is a Round 2 offshore wind project owned by E.ON.
The scheme is based on 73 multi-megawatt turbines, power from which will be collected and delivered to the 280 MVA offshore substation platform.
It will be transformed up to 132 kV and delivered onshore via two export cables to a new National Grid sub-station 30 km inland at Hedon on Staithes Road, Hull in the north-east of England.
Crompton's scope in the multi-million pound contract includes detailed electrical system design with grid code compliance, supply of a high voltage offshore sub-station consisting of two step up power transformers, medium voltage and high voltage GIS installed by E.ON on a single jacket foundation and a 132/275 kV onshore substation works including two large auto transformers, reactive power compensation equipment, high voltage switchgear, an IEC 61850 based SCADA, protection and control, and civil works.
The substations are scheduled to be installed and commissioned in 2013 and to become fully operational in early 2014.
''The UK will see 18 GW of offshore wind installed by 2020 and this first win provides CG a launchpad to secure a strong market share in this strategic sector and contribute to the UK's 2020 green energy targets'', says Laurent Demortier, CEO and managing director, Crompton Greaves.