Ireland’s only offshore wind farm is no longer operational as the owner plans to decommission the project.
Arklow Bank Wind Farm owner and operator GE Vernova applied earlier this year to decommission the wind farm, which has reached the end of its operating life.
Earlier this week, the Oireachtas joint committee on fisheries and maritime affairs heard that a decision is still awaited on the decommissioning.
Social Democrats TD Jennifer Whitmore, a member of the committee, said it was “worrying” that Ireland now had no operational windfarm offshore.
The committee was told that six “phase one” projects are at various stages of planning, although the backers of the Skerd project off Connemara have indicated they are pulling out.
The Arklow Bank windfarm was developed as a demonstrator project some 10km off the Wicklow coast on the Arklow Bank in the 1990s, and was constructed with seven turbines in 2003-4.
A service and warehousing base was set up in Arklow, and the team employed there will assist in managing the transition . A total of five direct and 20 indirect jobs were generated during the lifetime of the project.
The company says the wind turbines on the Arklow Bank have generated 1.29GWh of renewable energy during its operational life, which is the equivalent of 16,000 Irish homes per year being powered by renewable energy.

















































