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DolWin converter on route to Norway

4C Offshore | Chloe Emanuel
By: Chloe Emanuel 16/10/2023 Tennet

TenneT as the leading offshore transmission system operator in Europe ships out: in a major new milestone, the 900 MW DolWin epsilon offshore platform left Seatrium Limited's (Seatrium) shipyard in Singapore on 15 October 2023. After three years of construction and with more than ten million manhours, the heavy-transport vessel Mighty Servant 1 "piggybacked" the platform and set off on its tour. For about 60 days, she will travel around 13,000 nautical miles at sea around the Cape of Good Hope and is expected at the Aibel shipyard in Haugesund (Norway) in December. Once here, Aibel, as a partner of the consortium Aibel / Seatrium (formed from a combination of Sembcorp Marine and Keppel Offshore & Marine), will still carry out final technical equipment. Further Hitachi Energy as Aibel's subcontractor and supplier for the HVDC technology, will install the converter and transformers.
Next summer, the platform will be transported self-floating and installed at its final destination in the German North Sea.
 
TenneT is breaking new ground with the DolWin5 grid connection: for the first time, the so-called 66-kilovolt direct connection is being used. In comparison to previous projects, a wind farm transformer station is no longer required. Instead, the wind power produced off the coast of Lower Saxony is transmitted directly as three-phase (AC) current to TenneT's DolWin epsilon converter platform. This also meant corresponding planning in the technical design of the platform and detailed agreements with the wind farm, whose technical systems are now located on the platform. The elimination of the wind farm's transformer station not only minimises costs, but also construction time and interference with the marine ecosystem.
 
Tim Meyerjürgens, COO of TenneT, "Following the recent commissioning of DolWin6, this project is now also on the home straight - this is of enormous importance as the grid expansion in the North Sea must be accelerated in order to achieve our expansion targets in Germany. With DolWin5 and the elimination of the transformer station, we can demonstrate that we are pursuing and implementing more efficient solutions. This is only an intermediate step before we set new standards with the 2GW program."
The 2GW Program represents the next generation of offshore grid connection systems: a new standardised platform, a new certified cable system, a higher transmission capacity – with a lower environmental impact and the prospect of meshing in the future.
 
A special feature of the 82-metre-long by 73-metre-wide and 84-metre-high platform is the gravity-based foundation. So far, this has only been used for DolWin beta. It is based on the concept of a self-installing, gravity-based construction. The platform is slowly lowered to the 31-metre deep seabed by ballasting the four steel legs of the platform with water. The water is then replaced with heavy gravel to permanently secure the platform in-place for 30 years. Since no piles have to be driven into the seabed for anchoring, the installation is more quiet and more gentle on marine life. In addition, when such a platform reaches the end of its service life, the ballast can be removed from the hull and the complete platform towed to a harbour for dismantling.


For more information about offshore wind farm projects across the globe, click here.

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