A planning application for the first offshore wind farm off the west coast is being submitted to An Bord Pleanála.
As Afloat has previously reported, the Sceirde Rocks venture, or Fuinneamh Sceirde Teoranta, was an Irish project which was acquired by the Green Investment Group (GIG) in September 2021.
The company is a joint venture between the Australia-based Macquarie Group and the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Board.
The €1.5 billion wind farm is one of four phase one offshore wind projects, and the only one of the four earmarked for the west coast.
The proposed wind farm involves 30 turbines with a maximum tip height of 325-metre located 5km to 11.5km off the Connemara coastline.
The developers say that once constructed, with a target completion date of 2030, the windfarm will provide enough clean energy to power over 350,000 homes, avoiding CO2 emissions equivalent to removing 180,000 petrol cars from Ireland’s roads.
They state that it will also stimulate investment in the local economy, including a proposed Community Benefit Fund worth around €3.5m per year, every year, over a 20-year period (a total investment of approximately €70m).
The project also involves landfall works at Killard, south of the golf links and hotel at Doonbeg owned by US president-elect Donald Trump.
A petition initiated against the project last year has over 4,200 signatures. The petition on Change.org lists key concerns as:
“the size and proximity of the turbines to shore and their impacts on sites of historical and scientific importance, tourism, and fishing which sustain local communities”;
“impact on sensitive coastal and seabed environments which are critical for supporting the areas’ diverse wildlife, including endangered bird species”;
“direct impact on rare and migratory birds which will inevitably be struck and killed by turbine blades, as well as marine species including bottlenose dolphins and harbour porpoise affected by the increased marine noise associated with near shore wind farms”;
“the likely resultant closure of the University of Galway’s globally important Mace Head Atmospheric Research Station”;
“the lack of alignment with existing government strategies and plans. All Irish renewable energy projects – especially those proposed within or adjacent to environmentally sensitive areas – should align with national and EU rules, guidelines and strategies”, the petition says.

















































