SSE Renewables secures new onshore wind contracts

Viking Wind Farm (image credit: SSE Renewables)

SSE Renewables is set to be awarded 15-year contracts for low carbon power for over half a gigawatt of new onshore wind generation.

The organisation was successful in the UK’s fifth contract for difference (CfD) allocation round, with its Strathy South, Aberarder, and Bhlaraidh extension onshore wind farm projects in the Highlands, and its Viking Wind Farm project, securing the CfDs for a total of 605MW of new renewable energy.

The successful projects will receive the guaranteed strike price of £52.29/MWh, based on 2012 prices but annually indexed since then for CPI inflation, for the contracted low carbon electricity they will generate for a 15-year period from the 2027/28 delivery year.

The projects’ success in securing contracts follows the UK Government’s allocation round 5 process in which the projects competed in ‘Pot 1’ alongside various technologies including offshore wind, hydro, energy from waste with CHP, and solar photovoltaic (PV).

The Aberarder, Bhlaraidh extension, and Strathy South projects are each at late-stage development, having previously been granted planning consents by the Scottish Government. The Viking Wind Farm project is in the latter stage of construction.

Strathy South Wind Farm project, which was granted consent in November 2021, has secured a CfD for 231MW (100% of total capacity). Aberarder Wind Farm project, which SSE Renewables acquired in October 2022, has secured a CfD for 50MW (100% of total capacity). The project, adjacent to the operational Dunmaglass wind farm in Strathnairn near Inverness, was granted consent in April 2017.

Whilst the Bhlaraidh Extension Wind Farm project, which was granted consent in August 2022, has secured a CfD for 101MW (100% of total capacity). The Aberarder, Bhlaraidh Extension and Strathy South projects will all be targeting final investment decisions in 2024.

Finally, the 443MW Viking project, located in the Shetland Islands, has secured a CfD for 223MW (50% of total capacity). This award follows success in allocation Round 4 where Viking secured a CfD for 220MW (50% of its total capacity) for the 2026/27 delivery year. Construction work on the project is progressing well with all turbines now installed and, with commissioning works set to continue over the next year, remains on track for completion in late-summer 2024.

Once completed, these onshore wind projects will make an important contribution to the delivery of SSE plc’s Net Zero Acceleration Programme Plus, a fully funded five-year investment plan to 2027 which will see the group invest £18 billion or almost £10 million a day on average on critical national infrastructure. This plan includes increasing SSE Renewables’ net capacity from 4GW currently to more than 9GW, with around 3GW currently under construction.

SSE Renewables added that it notes that no offshore wind projects were successful in today’s allocation round, signalling what it said is a ‘challenging’ time for the industry which is experiencing ‘significant’ headwinds caused by inflationary pressure, commodity price volatility, interest rate raises, and global competition.

As a result, SSE Renewables said that ‘urgent’ reforms to the CfD scheme for offshore wind are now required to ensure that future auctions, notably allocation round 6 next year, deliver successful outcomes which boost energy security and benefit consumers.

Stephen Wheeler, MD of SSE Renewables
(Image credit: SSE) Renewables)

Stephen Wheeler, MD at SSE Renewables, said, “We are pleased to have secured onshore wind contracts for Aberarder, Bhlaraidh Extension, Strathy South, and Viking. Onshore wind, like offshore, is a critical component of the net zero transition with an essential role to play in decarbonising the UK’s energy supply.

“The CfD scheme has been a hugely successful mechanism for deploying renewable energy, but going forward, changes to the framework for offshore wind are required to ensure the UK can enhance its energy security whilst keeping costs low. Even at higher strike prices than AR5, wind power will still be far cheaper than other technologies while also delivering highly skilled green jobs and associated inward investment.

“The good news is that we now have a window of opportunity to ensure that the next auction round can bring forward the significant volumes of both onshore and offshore wind we need to achieve our energy security targets, unlock billions of pounds of investment, and enable the UK to retain its global leadership position in renewables. We stand ready to make these investments and look forward to working constructively with the government to build on our past successes.”