The Minister for Climate, Energy and the Environment Darragh O’Brien has welcomed the provisional results of the State’s second offshore wind auction which has awarded a contract off the south-east coast to a partnership between ESB and Danish company Ørsted.
The “extremely positive results” under the Offshore Renewable Electricity Support Scheme (ORESS) “mark another milestone moment in Ireland’s offshore renewable energy (ORE) ambitions, showing a vote of confidence internationally in Ireland’s ORE potential”, he has said.
The Tonn Nua auction invited renewable energy project developers to compete against each other, by bidding as low as possible, in order to win a contract to provide renewable electricity for a 20-year period.
O’Brien’s department said “the result of the hugely competitive auction has surpassed expectation, with a renewable energy price secured of €98.719 per megawatt hour (MWh)”.
“This price compares very favourably to recent offshore energy auctions in other jurisdictions and the price secured in Ireland’s recent onshore RESS 5 auction. For comparison, the average wholesale electricity price in Ireland to date in 2025 is €114/MWh,”it said.
The winning applicant, Helvick Head Offshore Wind DAC, is a joint venture partnership between ESB and Denmark-based renewable energy developer Ørsted.
ESB is involved in two major offshore wind energy projects in Scotland. Ørsted operate offshore wind farms in Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Taiwan, the US, and Britain.
In June 2023, ESB and Ørsted announced a 50/50 partnership to develop a pipeline of offshore wind development projects off the Irish coast.
The Tonn Nua auction was the first to be held for a site within the State’s first spatial plan for ORE development – the South Coast Designated Maritime Area Plan SC-DMAP.
The Tonn Nua site (meaning ‘New Wave’) is located off the Waterford coast. It will procure 900 megawatts (MW) of clean energy, enough to power almost 1 million homes, O’Brien’s department says.
It says it will save 1.8 million tonnes of CO2 emissions each year after its construction, making a “sizeable contribution to Ireland’s wider climate and renewable electricity targets”.
Tonn Nua is one of four maritime sites within the SC-DMAP identified for future offshore wind development.
The SC-DMAP was approved by the Oireachtas in October 2024 following an environmental assessment process, and an almost year-long engagement process with coastal communities and key stakeholders, including fishers, environmental NGOs and local authorities.
“An independent analysis has highlighted that implementing the SC-DMAP will deliver considerable economic benefits and employment opportunities,”the department says.

















































