- Tim Pick appointed UK’s first Offshore Wind Champion
- flagship £160 million floating offshore wind fund opens for
expressions of interest
- comes just weeks after the publication of government’s Energy
Security Strategy
Ambitious plans to expand offshore wind around the United Kingdom
to power homes and businesses with cheap, homegrown energy
received a further boost today with the appointment of a new
government champion and a multimillion-pound manufacturing fund
opening for expressions of interest.
The appointment of Tim Pick as the first UK Offshore Wind
Champion was confirmed by Prime Minister and Business and Energy
Secretary today.
The Floating Offshore Wind Manufacturing Investment Scheme
(FLOWMIS)
will provide £160 million in government funding to boost floating
offshore wind capability around the UK at sites in Scotland,
Wales and elsewhere by supporting manufacturers and giving
private investors the confidence to back this emerging sector
which is expected to rapidly expand in the years ahead.
Business and Energy Secretary said:
We are delighted to appoint Tim Pick as the UK’s first Offshore
Wind Champion and begin the process of supporting British jobs
and offshore wind manufacturers with £160 million of government
funding.
Our announcement today represents another important step in our
ambitious plans to accelerate offshore wind as a source of
affordable, homegrown energy for the UK and drive down bills for
households.
Tim Pick will play a vital role in spearheading the work to
accelerate new offshore wind projects around the UK, chairing the
Offshore Wind Acceleration Taskforce (OWAT).
This Taskforce will bring together companies from across the
offshore wind sector to coordinate their efforts, and speed up
the further development of offshore wind power in the UK.
The appointment comes as the government today calls on industry
for information on how best to invest the £160 million of support
for floating offshore wind announced by the Prime Minister in
October 2021.
The emerging UK floating offshore wind sector already has two
operational projects generating power off the coast of Scotland
at Hywind Scotland and Kincardine. The £160 million of funding
will unlock further deepwater port infrastructure and support
private investment in new factories to mass produce major
components for floating offshore wind, with ambitions for
projects off the coast of Wales.
15GW’s of floating offshore
wind in Scottish waters has been announced through the ScotWind
leasing round and a further 4GW
is to be leased off the Welsh coast in the Celtic Sea which,
combined, could require well over a thousand floating wind
foundations. This will present the UK with a huge opportunity to
establish a world leading sector capable of bringing down
technology costs and delivering floating offshore wind at scale.
The Request for Information will help the government to
understand the opportunities available in the UK and how we can
most effectively support private investment.
The government announced in the British Energy Security Strategy
its ambition to deliver up to 50GW of offshore wind by 2030, including up
to 5GW of innovative floating
wind, produced by turbines on floating platforms out in deeper
seawaters, many off the coast of Scotland and Wales where it will
build on these nations’ strong industrial and maritime heritage.
This expansion to 50GW will
further attract vital investment to UK coastal communities,
adding to the 60,000 direct and indirect jobs we estimate could
already be supported by the offshore wind sector by 2030, and
levelling up Scotland, Wales and the wider country.
It will help to reduce the UK’s reliance on expensive, imported
fossil fuels, developing clean, affordably produced energy
produced in the UK, for the people of the UK.
About Tim Pick
Until his retirement in April, Tim was Head of
Energy, Resources and Infrastructure at law firm
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer. Prior to joining
Freshfields in 2013 he was head of Shearman &
Sterling’s international Project Development and Finance
practice.
Tim has more than 25 years’ experience of advising on the
development of energy projects in the UK, the Eastern
Mediterranean, the Middle East and beyond, including in the oil
and gas and power generation industries. He was based in Abu
Dhabi for around a decade, with the balance of his law firm
career based in London.