The first offshore wind turbine in France installed in the Saint-Nazaire wind farm


The first French offshore wind turbine, off Saint-Nazaire, April 12, 2022 (AFP / Sebastien SALOM-GOMIS)

France’s first offshore wind turbine has been installed in the Saint-Nazaire offshore park for commissioning in early May, AFP journalists noted during a visit on Tuesday.

The Saint-Nazaire offshore park, the very first in France to come into service, will eventually have 80 wind turbines, which will be gradually installed by the end of the year.

The mast of the first had been installed on Thursday on its foundation, laid at sea in September. Two of the three blades were hung up immediately, but bad weather conditions delayed the installation of the last one, which should be added during the week.

“It’s a lot of emotion and joy for the whole team, it’s a project we’ve been working on for ten years,” said Cédric Le Bousse, director of marine renewable energies France at EDF.

Off Pouliguen and Le Croisic, the 80 wind turbines will be distributed between 12 and 20 km from the coast, over 78 km2.

Each wind turbine has a power of six megawatts, “compared to three to four for an onshore wind turbine”, specifies Cédric Le Bousse.

“The park, once installed, will produce the equivalent of the consumption (of electricity) of 700,000 inhabitants, which represents half of the Loire-Atlantique. Or 20% of the total consumption of the department”, explained Olivier de La Laurencie, project director of the Saint-Nazaire wind farm.

Counting the base, the mast and the blades, the wind turbines culminate at about 180 m in height.

They are installed four by four thanks to a huge ship/platform planted on retractable “legs”, which transports masts and blades from the port of Saint-Nazaire to the open sea.

In the middle of the park, the electrical “substation”, connecting the wind turbines and responsible for returning the current to the ground via a semi-buried cable, is already in place.

Other offshore wind farms are under construction in France. That of Fécamp (Seine-Maritime) must be put into operation in 2023, before those of Saint-Brieuc (Côtes-d’Armor) and Courseulles-sur-Mer (Calvados).

© 2022 AFP

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