Bremerhaven, 20 May 2014, RWE Innogy GmbH |
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At RWE’s base port in Bremerhaven the go-ahead was given yesterday for the installation of the 48 wind turbines that will comprise the Nordsee Ost Offshore Wind Farm: Four 240-tonnes tubular steel towers, together with the associated hubs and nacelles, were loaded onto the installation vessel “Victoria Mathias” which will transport them for installation at sea over the coming days.
Loading of a tower section
The huge dimensions of the 6 megawatt-turbines’ individual components are impressive to behold: The nacelles alone weigh-in at approx. 350 tonnes and have an equivalent in size to a detached single-family home. They house the machine’s components which include the transmission and generator. The tower itself, which comprises two individual sections, measures 70 metres overall in length and weighs over 240 tonnes. To allow these massive components to be carried by the installation vessel “Victoria Mathias”, the vessel underwent conversion during recent weeks at the Mützelfeldtwerft shipyard in Cuxhaven. The work included removing the mounting points for the foundations and replacing them with shipping braces for the wind turbines.
Storage of large-scale components at base port
To ensure all of the turbines can be installed to schedule the sister vessel to the “Victoria Mathias”, the “Friedrich Ernestine”, will also be operating for the wind farm – and has been tasked with installing the 144 rotor blades. Each rotor blade is 60 meters in length and weighs some 60 tonnes. This is equivalent to the weight of six fully grown elephants. The “Friedrich Ernestine” will have up to 15 of these giant blades aboard when it makes its initial foray into the 24 square kilometre construction area in about a month’s time. The vessel is currently at the Mützelfeldtwerft shipyard where it is undergoing preparations for its operations at sea.
8 tower segments, 4 hubs and 4 nacelles were loaded onto the installation vessel “Victoria Mathias”
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