
abbey craig wrote:they will employ around 100 personell,to maintain the site.Consisting of Managers,technicians,health and safety personnel,and boat tender crews etc etc.






abbey craig wrote:There will be no chance these wind turbine sites will be seviced from Northern Ireland.The down time on these turbines cost money to be seviced from N Ireland would never work,it would take a maintenance over a day to get to the west coast of Scotland.
I worked on the burbo bank offshore project for Siemans,and they now have a full maintenance crew covering the site,i dont know the exact numbers,but i would reckon around 30 personel covering the 30 turbines.The same set up in North Wales they have there own maintenance crew,and personel.



Kevin wrote:
It would take longer, be riskier and be costlier than a direct transfer route from Northern Ireland (or Donegal in Ireland) from where they could consolidate a cheaper single service main site which would be able to service and support the proposed Machrihanish, Islay and even Tiree offshore windfarm sites ...
The most that maybe could be hoped for would be a small satellite service area nearby to each site which includes helicopter access for emergency transfer of personnel to/from the main service/support site in Northern Ireland or Ireland.
The support/maintenance teams will be multinational and a necessity will be easy and direct access to an international airport ...
The base will undoubtedly be in Northern Ireland...
abbey craig wrote:There will be no chance these wind turbine sites will be seviced from Northern Ireland.The down time on these turbines cost money to be seviced from N Ireland would never work,it would take a maintenance crew over a day to get to the west coast of Scotland.
I worked on the burbo bank offshore project for Siemans,and they now have a full maintenance crew covering the site,i dont know the exact numbers,but i would reckon around 30 personel covering the 30 turbines.The same set up in North Wales they have there own maintenance crew,and personel.

Mary G wrote:Kevin wrote:
It would take longer, be riskier and be costlier than a direct transfer route from Northern Ireland (or Donegal in Ireland) from where they could consolidate a cheaper single service main site which would be able to service and support the proposed Machrihanish, Islay and even Tiree offshore windfarm sites ...
The most that maybe could be hoped for would be a small satellite service area nearby to each site which includes helicopter access for emergency transfer of personnel to/from the main service/support site in Northern Ireland or Ireland.
The support/maintenance teams will be multinational and a necessity will be easy and direct access to an international airport ...
The base will undoubtedly be in Northern Ireland...
Interesting stuff, Kevin. You talk very authoritatively and knowledgeably. I take it your sources are solid. If so, this is exactly the sort of information that the local community needs to be able to assess the merits of the respective arguments.
How can people verify your evidence, Kevin?
By the way - very helpful map
Also, abbey craig, you have a lot of valuable first-hand experience.abbey craig wrote:There will be no chance these wind turbine sites will be seviced from Northern Ireland.The down time on these turbines cost money to be seviced from N Ireland would never work,it would take a maintenance crew over a day to get to the west coast of Scotland.
I worked on the burbo bank offshore project for Siemans,and they now have a full maintenance crew covering the site,i dont know the exact numbers,but i would reckon around 30 personel covering the 30 turbines.The same set up in North Wales they have there own maintenance crew,and personel.
I would be interested to hear what you make of Kevin's analysis. Not many international airports in North Wales - even Manchester is around four hours drive away...
Ironic that there are people like you in the town with technical skills and expertise in this sort of work, and yet you need to travel so far to ply your trade.


At this stage this information can surely only be speculative or based on personal opinion?

Bertie wrote:The only definitive fact is that, if this project goes ahead, the local scenery and landscape will be an eyesore for future generations.

Bertie wrote: The only definitive fact is that, if this project goes ahead, the local scenery and landscape will be an eyesore for future generations.

Return to Local News and Issues
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests