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The largest construction project in the history of Denmark will be majority-owned by the Danish government.
Denmark says it has approved plans to build an artificial island in the North Sea that could generate wind power for at least three million households.
Parliament in June adopted a political environmental framework aimed at reducing the country’s CO2 emissions by 70 percent by 2030, which included plans for the world’s first “energy hubs” on the island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea and in the North Sea.
On Thursday, Parliament went further by approving a plan to place the North Sea hub on an artificial island, with a wind power farm that will initially supply three gigawatts (GW) of electricity.
That could later be scaled up to 10GW – enough for 10 million households – according to the ministry of climate, energy and utilities, much more than what is needed for Denmark’s population of 5.8 million.
“Clearly this is too much for Denmark alone and this also why we see this as a part of a bigger European project,” said Climate Minister Dan Jorgensen, adding that Denmark wanted to also export excess energy to the rest of Europe.
Plans also include the use of “electrolysis” to extract hydrogen for use in the production of renewable fuels for things such as maritime transport.
The island, “the largest construction project in the history of Denmark”, is to be majority-owned by the Danish government in partnership with private companies and is expected to cost about 210 billion Danish kroner ($34bn, 28 billion euros).
Rather than a traditional offshore wind power farm, the island will function as an “energy hub” allowing connections from other countries’ wind power farms and cables to efficiently distribute the incoming energy.
Its final size is yet to be decided but it is expected to cover between 120,000 to 460,000 square metres (about 1.3 million to five million square feet), according to the ministry.
Trailblazing transition
The total number of wind turbines has not been finalised either, but estimates range between 200 and 600 units at “a previously unseen scale”, with the tip of the blades reaching as high as 260 metres (850 feet) above the sea.
While the project is a step in the plan to provide enough energy to electrify Denmark, Jorgensen also said they hoped the project could offer guidance for bigger countries looking to transition their societies in the face of climate change.
“We know that as a small country, only responsible for about 0.1 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, it doesn’t matter that much to the climate what we actually do in Denmark,” he said.
“We hope that it will have a bigger influence by influencing others.”
The project’s next steps include environmental impact assessments and talks with potential investors, so construction is still some years off.
According to the ministry, initial construction is likely to begin around 2026 and finished sometime between 2030 and 2033.
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