Windpower Engineering & Development

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Most recent posts
    • News
    • Featured
  • Resources
    • Digital issues
    • Podcasts
    • Suppliers
    • Webinars
    • Events
  • Videos
  • 2025 Leadership
    • 2024 Winners
    • 2023 Winners
    • 2022 Winners
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe

Wind Talk: Seatower prepares for first demonstration of offshore turbine foundations

By WPED Contributor | June 6, 2014

big_logoAfter six years, Seatower is primed and ready to shake up the offshore wind market with the first demonstration of its Cranefree Gravity foundation at the Fécamp offshore wind farm project in the English Channel.

In this episode of Wind Talk, Petter Karal, CEO of Seatower, discusses the lessons offshore wind has learned from offshore oil and gas. He also talks about Seatower’s plans for supplying installation solutions for offshore wind in the budding U.S. market.

Click play below to listen.

This podcast is sponsored by ExxonMobil.

ExxonMobil-logo-for-podcasts


Filed Under: Offshore wind, Podcasts, Projects
Tagged With: seatower
 

About The Author

WPED Contributor

If you would like to contribute to Windpower, please contact us: https://www.windpowerengineering.com/meetourteam/

Comments

  1. Robert R. Bullard says

    June 24, 2014 at 11:28 am

    Hmm –

    Almost one-half the weight of “regular concrete” is lost in sea-water submergence. One wonders how much reinforcing steel may be required compared to the steel for a tripod pile jacket and piles for water depths up to 50 meters. The life time of an off shore wind machine is probably 30 years. 30 years ago the state of the art wind machine was in low hundreds of kw name plate range. 30 years from now, the wind machine for which the tower is fashioned will be obsolesced, requiring either abandonment of the foundation (which should still be solid as a rock), adding more gravity structures in a bound cluster, etc. In any event removal and recycling of a massive hunk of concrete challenges the imagination. On the other hand, tripod steel structures can be pulled and recycled, with a new larger structure plugged in for a bigger machine at the site using some portion of the existing collector cable.
    It is not at all clear that we have a wheel that is better than those that have been displayed at the OTC over the last 50 years. Those folks are still doing it today with cranes, barges and pile drivers when the weather is good, even in the North Sea.

  2. Andrew Merecicky says

    June 12, 2014 at 9:15 am

    Thanks, MSc, very cool shot of the gravity foundations all lined up there. The gravity foundation technology has been proven by the oil and gas industry even before Thornton Banks too. For me, that’s what makes this demonstration exciting: not that Seatower is the first to prove this technology, but that gravity foundations seem to be a very viable solution for offshore wind farm installation and that there is an increasingly efficient supply chain developing behind the technology. Seatower is not the only player in this game either, which I also believe is a good thing, but they do seem to be one of the front runners in bringing this technology to offshore wind. As Karal points out in the podcast, proving more examples of this technology for a major project like Fecamp will hopefully lead to seeing the technology expand to the U.S. offshore market, where many of the huge crane ships required for more traditional installation methods (steel monopile) are simply not available right now. You’re absolutely right though. This technology works and it’s already been proven. Thanks for your comment!

  3. MSc says

    June 12, 2014 at 6:44 am

    Gravity foundations already proven at ‘Thornton Banks’ 5M Offshore Turbines (REpower/Senvion)

    http://renews.biz/67084/emf-seeks-footings-for-fecamp/

Related Articles Read More >

US government allows Empire Wind offshore project to resume construction
Overlooked and underleveraged: Why ‘lite repowering’ is wind energy’s best near-term bet
79 aging wind turbines brought back online throughout Texas panhandle
Data center signs 166-MW PPA with Las Majadas Wind in Texas

Podcasts

Wind Spotlight: Looking back at a year of Thrive with ZF Wind Power
See More >

Windpower Engineering & Development Digital Edition Archive

Digital Edition

Explore the full archive of digital issues of Windpower Engineering & Development, presented in a high-quality, user-friendly format. Access current and past editions, clip, share, and download valuable content from the industry’s leading wind power engineering resource.

Windpower Engineering & Development
  • Wind Articles
  • Solar Power World
  • Subscribe to Windpower Engineering
  • About Us/Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 WTWH Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of WTWH Media
Privacy Policy | Advertising

Search Windpower Engineering & Development

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Most recent posts
    • News
    • Featured
  • Resources
    • Digital issues
    • Podcasts
    • Suppliers
    • Webinars
    • Events
  • Videos
  • 2025 Leadership
    • 2024 Winners
    • 2023 Winners
    • 2022 Winners
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe