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Power

The 'World's Largest Floating Wind Farm' Produces Its First Power (cnbc.com) 73

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: A facility described as the world's largest floating wind farm produced its first power over the weekend, with more turbines set to come online before the year is out. In a statement Monday, Norwegian energy firm Equinor -- better known for its work in the oil and gas industry -- said power production from Hywind Tampen's first wind turbine took place on Sunday afternoon. While wind is a renewable energy source, Hywind Tampen will be used to help power operations at oil and gas fields in the North Sea. Equinor said Hywind Tampen's first power was sent to the Gullfaks oil and gas field.

Hywind Tampen is located around 140 kilometers (86.9 miles) off the coast of Norway, in depths ranging from 260 to 300 meters. Seven of the wind farm's turbines are slated to come on stream in 2022, with installation of the remaining four taking place in 2023. When complete, Equinor says it will have a system capacity of 88 megawatts. Equinor said Hywind Tampen was expected to meet around 35% of the Gullfaks and Snorre fields' electricity demand. "This will cut CO2 emissions from the fields by about 200,000 tonnes per year," the company added.

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The 'World's Largest Floating Wind Farm' Produces Its First Power

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  • It's greenwash (Score:4, Insightful)

    by a-zA-Z0-9etc ( 6394646 ) on Tuesday November 15, 2022 @09:26AM (#63052723) Homepage
    “This is a unique project, the first wind farm in the world powering producing oil and gas installations.”

    Instead of putting a few wind turbines next to their oil and gas installations Equinor could have stopped profiting from pumping oil and gas. But hey here's another "solution which sort of sounds green and allows the company involved to pretend that they're something other than climate criminals. It will of course make very little difference to the environmental destruction due to this company.
    • Re:It's greenwash (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gtall ( 79522 ) on Tuesday November 15, 2022 @09:34AM (#63052733)

      Give it a rest, it takes time to transition from carbon fuels to renewables. Admittedly, the world doesn't not have a lot of time left at its disposal to effect a change, but regardless, it won't change on a dime and bankrupting the company won't get us there.

      • Give it a rest, it takes time to transition from carbon fuels to renewables.

        Big time, but the naysayers are as persistent as old Wile E. Coyote in the old Road Runner cartoons.

        Admittedly, the world doesn't not have a lot of time left at its disposal to effect a change, but regardless, it won't change on a dime and bankrupting the company won't get us there.

        I'm of the pretty firm belief that we reached a tipping point back in the late 1970's, The roller coaster ride has started, and we are going to go where it takes us. This is in contradiction to what a lot of climatologists publicly say, but there it is.

        Now what this stuff about renewables is doing is giving us time to adapt so it doesn't all come crashing down at one time.

        Fossil fuels are not in infini

        • I'm of the pretty firm belief that we reached a tipping point back in the late 1970's,

          Yep. That's why I've always considered people who became parents after about then (allow some leeway into the 1980s) to be stark staring insane. Certainly not something I've ever considered justifiable.

          We'll just end up with them being so expensive that we won't be able to support civilization on them.

          Yep. Well, not as an energy source. They'll continue to be used as chemical feedstocks for the plastics and chemicals ind

          • by tragedy ( 27079 )

            Yep. Well, not as an energy source. They'll continue to be used as chemical feedstocks for the plastics and chemicals industries long after they're too expensive for use as a fuel. Which means (and a lot of people don't get this) they'll continue to be drilled fur. Unless some cunning biochemist finds a way to get bacteria to spit out C-20+ chains and benzene rings at a sufficiently low cost.

            There's been some successful research into doing exactly that using lignin as a feedstock. Mass industrial processes for doing so at low cost are still in question, but we'll have to wait and see.

            • People are trying it with a lot more feedstocks than lignin. Fructose and other sugars, various cellulosic wastes from fodder crops, the occasional ground up cow (all that DNA needs mineral phosphate!) The hype machine doesn't get fired up every month, but at least quarterly.

              Process plants with a thousand bopd (barrel oil per day)-equivalent output ... I think I can count them on the fingers of one nose. (A 1000bopd well would generally be considered good news if onshore, and a candidate for "plug and aban

        • I think before we run out of fossil fuels (getting too expensive) we'll have run out of civilization... Pardon my sarcasm.
    • Well, it's better than powering their oil and gas operations with oil and gas. But maybe not a lot better.

      It's all very well to label companies producing oil and gas "climate criminals" but they're not the ones who burn it and release the CO2 into the atmosphere.
      • And even still better than powering the wind turbines with oil and gas...
    • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

      You can burn your petrol when you need it. You cannot profit from your wind farm when there's no wind. For that reason, wind turbines will *never* replace oil or gas or coal (at least alone and for now). So the point is moot.

      • Like I said above, Europeans are not stupid and know how to run diverse energy systems.
        • Well, if they consider an 88MW power plant significant, maybe not so much. This wind farm produces about 9% of the power of your typical large power plant. When there are multi GW nuke plants, I can't be terribly impressed by a brand new 0.088GW plant....
      • You can burn your petrol when you need it. You cannot profit from your wind farm when there's no wind. For that reason, wind turbines will *never* replace oil or gas or coal (at least alone and for now). So the point is moot.

        You do know that there are many places where the wind does not stop, right?

        • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

          You do know that there are many places where the wind does not stop, right?

          There are no places on this planet where the wind does not stop. There are places where the wind blows for extremely long periods of time. A great deal of these places where the wind blows for long periods of time, it is simply not feasible to put a wind farm there. We are talking Antarctica, tops of Himalayan mountains, and the planes of Peru.

          Simply put, wind alone will NEVER replace fossil fuel power generation.

          • "Simply put, wind alone will NEVER replace fossil fuel power generation" - "simply put" wind is not the only form of clean power generation so thats a stupid comment to make. At best, fossil power will likely become a form backup power source which will be acceptable.
            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              Reading compression is your friend.

              "Simply put, wind alone will NEVER replace fossil fuel power generation"

              Is a true statement, but the key word here is "alone." That leaves plenty of room for other forms of green energy, such as solar, nuclear, and my favorite, geothermal.

      • The obvious reply to this remark is an insult, but instead let's just state that it is obvious you are writing nonsense that you have not bothered to research.

        Go and google, then come back and apologise.
      • You cannot profit from your wind farm when there's no wind. For that reason, wind turbines will *never* replace oil or gas or coal...

        Um, batteries can store electrical energy to provide electricity when the wind isn't blowing. Everybody knows this.

        Industrial-scale batteries already exist. Tesla is putting them in semis, and they are under development (scale-up) for cargo ships. That's about the scale you would need to power a gas/oil plant, rather than oil-based diesel generators.

        • Um, batteries can store electrical energy to provide electricity when the wind isn't blowing. Everybody knows this.

          Natural gas and fuel oil can provide electricity on demand. Everybody knows this. Not only are tanks of fossil fuels a store of energy but they are a source of energy. Everybody knows this but they may not realize the implications. We can pump the fossil fuels out of the ground with a very high energy return on energy invested (EROEI), then we can store that energy at very low cost in tanks for when it is needed. The EROEI isn't a perfect measure of value or profit but it is at least a place to start.

        • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

          Um, batteries can store electrical energy to provide electricity when the wind isn't blowing. Everybody knows this.

          Batteries will never be able to store enough energy to meet demand. Barring some radically advancement in energy storage technology. Even the largest battery farms planned will not supply energy needs for more than a few hours. It's all a matter of energy density.

          • You forget the future of EV batteries joining the grid. Why do all anti-renewables seem to think that innovation stopped in the era of caveman tech of needing to burn stuff?
    • Instead of putting a few wind turbines next to their oil and gas installations Equinor could have stopped profiting from pumping oil and gas.

      Sure why would a company want to continue to exist? I mean a company other than Facebook, they are doing their best to not exist, but not all companies are run by morons.

      solution which sort of sounds green

      Is wind power not green? Maybe they should just go back to doing what oil platforms typically do: Power themselves by burning untreated, unrefined oil/gas mixtures, and you should see just how much energy that takes.

      pretend that they're something other than climate criminals

      Who is a criminal? The people doing what they can to reduce emissions and green their operation? Or the people who buy a produ

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Tuesday November 15, 2022 @12:16PM (#63053145)
    If I've understood TFS correctly, this is an oil & gas company that is subsidising itself with wind power. If so, what more evidence do you need for the superiority & economic viability of wind power?
    • That's my impression too. They have access to gas from the source, without any transport costs, essentially as cheaply as possible and they still prefer to build a wind farm due to the better long term economics.
  • A benefit of offshore wind farms that I haven't heard mentioned is that they will provide patches of shade in the open ocean. How much depends upon how much platform surrounds each windmill.

    Fish like the shade –– they can often be found hanging around under boats and docks. For whatever reason – lower visibility of schools to predators, I don't know, but they do tend to congregate in shadowy places.

    So, offshore wind farms could inadvertently provide little rest stops in an otherwise open o

  • They use a wind farm, to provide energy, to pump oil/gas. LOL

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