Van Oord has won the contract for the transport and installation of the monopile foundations for the Nordseecluster offshore wind project in Germany from RWE. It will be the first project for the brand-new offshore installation vessel Boreas.

The 1.6-GW wind farm cluster is expected to generate enough renewable energy to supply the equivalent of 1,600,000 German households.

Van Oord’s scope includes the installation of 104 extended monopiles as well as the installation of the scour protection. In 2025, 44 monopiles are planned for installation in 2025 and the remaining sixty monopiles in 2027.

Also read: Van Oord starts UK offshore wind project and wins one in Baltic Sea

Boreas

The Boreas is currently under construction and will be the largest offshore installation vessel of its kind, purpose-built for the transport and installation of the next generation foundations and turbines for offshore wind farms. The jack-up vessel, with a crane capacity of more than 3000 tonnes, can install up to 20-MW wind turbines at sea.

It has the capability to fully operate on methanol, drastically reducing its carbon footprint. Green methanol is one of the most promising future fuels as it is produced using only renewable energy sources. As such, it can reduce the carbon footprint of Boreas by more than 78 per cent. This is in line with Van Oord’s ambition to reduce emissions and to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.

Picture by Van Oord.

Also read: Van Oord’s new giant jack-up Boreas launched