LONDON (Reuters) -Britain’s Crown Estate will lease sites for six offshore wind projects capable of generating enough green electricity to power more than seven million homes by 2030 under agreements announced on Thursday.
The UK is one of the world’s largest offshore wind markets, with more than 10 gigawatts (GW) of installed capacity across 38 sites, which it plans to boost to as much as 50 GW by the end of the decade.
The six sites being leased will add 8 GW towards that goal, the Crown Estate statement said.
The Crown Estate, an independent commercial business that oversees the British monarch’s public holdings, manages the seabed around England, Wales and Northern Ireland and awards seabed rights for the development of offshore wind, wave and tidal energy.
Three of the sites to be leased are located off the coasts of North Wales, Cumbria and Lancashire. Three more are in the North Sea off the coasts of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire.
Germany’s RWE said it had signed lease agreements for two 1.5 GW projects, known collectively as Dogger Bank South. If realised, these could power more than 3 million British homes.
RWE has said it plans gross investment of 15 billion pounds ($18.6 billion) in Britain by 2030.
Gus Jaspert, managing director in charge of the Crown Estate’s marine portfolio, said the deal “marks a significant milestone for the UK on the road to net zero”, referring to carbon emissions targets.
With energy prices hitting record highs last year, driven in part by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Britain has set targets to increase wind, nuclear and solar power generation.
Wind generated a record amount of energy in Britain in 2022, supplying more than 25% of its electricity, National Grid says.
The offshore wind market has grown to become the largest source of renewable electricity in the UK, the Crown Estate said, currently able to power about 40% of UK homes.
($1 = 0.8085 pounds)
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr SharafedinAdditional reporting by Christoph SteitzEditing by Jan Harvey and David Goodman)