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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday January 21 2020, @06:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the lots-of-spinning-blades dept.

Renewable energy statistics just keep topping each other. Solar power is getting cheaper. Battery storage capacity is getting better. And wind farms are getting bigger.

2019 saw the world’s biggest (at the time) offshore wind farm come online, as well as construction of the biggest offshore wind farm in the US off the coast of Atlantic City.

But a new figure blows all of these out of the water. Last week, British renewable energy developer SSE announced construction of Dogger Bank Wind Farm off the eastern coast of England in the North Sea.

With a capacity of 3.6 gigawatts (GW), Dogger Bank will be three times bigger than the world’s biggest existing wind farm, the nearby 1.2 GW Hornsea One.

Located near a seaside town called Ulrome, which is 195 miles north of London, Dogger Bank will have three separate sites—Creyke Beck A, Creyke Beck B, and Teesside A—each with a 1.2 GW capacity, and construction is slated to take two years.

The project is a collaboration between SSE and Equinor, a Norwegian energy company.


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  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Wednesday January 22 2020, @11:06AM (1 child)

    by TheRaven (270) on Wednesday January 22 2020, @11:06AM (#946781) Journal
    Do you have gas heating / cooking? We have a gas-fired boiler for hot water and central heating and gas hobs. That reduces out total electricity consumption a lot in comparison to someone powering all of these from electricity. A lot of US households use electricity for heating and cooking.
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  • (Score: 2) by quietus on Wednesday January 22 2020, @07:42PM

    by quietus (6328) on Wednesday January 22 2020, @07:42PM (#946975) Journal

    Yes. Heating oil for central heating, at the moment (looking to change to scrap wood pellets, perhaps in combination with a heatpump, in future) gas for cooking -- heating your house on electricity results in ridiculous bills over here.