400 jobs hope as offshore wind farm manufacturer signs up for Humber Bank site
Able Marine Energy Park selected by South Korean monopile producer
Hundreds of jobs could be created on the South Humber Bank after an international manufacturer in the offshore wind supply chain selected Able Marine Energy Park for a UK base.
South Korean monopile producer SeAH is looking to create 400 jobs at the North Killingholme site, after confirming its intention to establish a facility.
One of the leading pipe manufacturers in the world, it would bring the first such production to the UK.
A memorandum of understanding has been signed, with Able UK executive chairman Peter Stephenson stating the site is now ready to become “a vital part of the brave new world”.
He said: “The offshore wind sector is potentially on the cusp of something very special. We have a clear and unambiguous policy from Whitehall through the Sector Deal in the Industrial Strategy, and the increasingly demanding targets for both power generation and the extent of UK content.
“Combine this with the sector’s extraordinary efforts in terms of developing new products and significantly reducing costs and the sector is set to become a dominant factor in a post Covid-19 UK economy.
“However, to make the most of this ‘brave new world’, and to deliver 60 per cent UK content we must act now to capitalise on this singular, but time-limited opportunity.
“Able Marine Energy Park can and will play a vital role in this process to, first and foremost, provide purpose-built heavy-duty deep-water quays and, just as crucially, a large expanse of adjacent supporting hinterland – 353 acres.
“Unless we can put in place these key building blocks the status quo will prevail and the aspirations to maximise UK activity will be further diminished.
“SeAH are one of a number of manufacturers with whom we are at similar stages of negotiation.
“SeAH have fully embraced the concept of establishing a new ‘world-scale’ industrial cluster for offshore wind on the Humber and with it the overarching strength of the UK’s offshore wind sector.
“Subject to our receiving the necessary support the first quays will be available towards the end of 2022, to coincide with the needs of both manufacturers and the developers of the offshore wind farms”
Monopiles, which are driven into the seabed, provide the foundations for offshore wind turbines to be installed upon.
Hyungkun Nam, SeAH’s chief executive, said: “The UK has the strongest market and we intend to play an important role in the ongoing development of the offshore wind sector. We recognise the considerable opportunity to be the first significant UK-based monopile supplier and partnering with Able Marine Energy Park, and with it Able, as a company
with such a credible track record, as the sole partner with whom we wish to progress matters. That is why we have signed an exclusive memorandum of understanding with Able as we seek to bring to reality what would be a significant investment with an initial annual capacity of 162,000 tons, and rising up to 320,000 tons and the prospect of providing around 400 new jobs.”
SeAH is the largest steel tube manufacturer in South Korea, with more than 60 years experience in producing for a variety of complex markets, including offshore wind jacket steel products for legs, bracings, nodes, and pin piles.
It has already expanded operations into the USA, Vietnam, UAE, and Italy, and states that its research and development proficiency gives it a “firm belief that our company can meet the technical challenges required for the latest XXXL monopiles”.
Teesside-based Able UK brought forward the £450 million scheme for the ‘big space in the right place’ in 2009, but after a protracted planning process it has yet to attract an investor, coming close with both Orsted and Innogy (now RWE), following an earlier MoU with Austrian foundation producer Strabag. The gravity-based foundations it was bringing forward proved not to the technology of choice for developers, with larger monopiles the preferred option.
At its Seaton Port, near Hartlepool, Able has, however, provided the logistics and load-out facilities for Hornsea One’s foundation package – Orsted’s world leading farm – and will do so for RWE’s Triton Knoll. Both are to be operated and maintained from Grimsby.