Meeting of the Parliament 15 March 2016
Scotland is about to have two world firsts: the first largest tidal stream in the Pentland Firth—by Atlantis and MeyGen—and the first largest floating offshore wind farm—by Statoil—off the north-east coast of Scotland.
In response to the member’s question about the offshore floating turbines, research by the Carbon Trust suggests that that concept could reduce generating costs to below £100 per MWh, with larger concepts producing even lower costs by the mid-2020s. Floating offshore turbines can also be deployed wherever the best wind conditions are, and they can take account of different wind directions compared with fixed offshore wind developments. Thereby, they can access the market at a more commercially suitable time.
In conclusion, as Mr Gibson rightly signalled, floating offshore and other technologies offer the potential, through substantial cost reduction, to provide excellent renewable low-carbon solutions for electricity provision over the next several decades.