Ireland is among signatories of a new declaration pledging a power grid in the North Sea driven by offshore wind.
As The Guardian reports, the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, has said he wants the North Sea to become the “largest reservoir of clean energy worldwide”, as he announced plans to accelerate efforts to link up offshore wind power projects with Europe.
Ireland’s climate, energy and environment minister Darragh O’Brien and energy ministers of Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway and the United Kingdom signed the Hamburg Declaration of Energy Ministers.
It sets out a commitment to a more regional approach to cross-border infrastructure planning, closer cooperation on the protection of offshore energy infrastructure, and the development of an offshore financing framework to strengthen the business case for offshore wind in the North Seas.
They will build windfarms at sea that directly connect to various countries through high-voltage subsea cables, under plans that are expected to provide 100 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind power, or enough electricity capacity to power 143m homes.
Speaking at the summit, O’Brien said that “as a small, windy island at the edge of Europe, the offshore energy potential of Ireland is huge”.
“Increasing our cross-border electricity interconnection will enhance European energy security, increase our economic competitiveness and critically reduce consumer prices,”he said.
“Today, I am pleased to sign the Hamburg Declaration, which will put in place tangible actions to enable greater interconnection in the North Seas, a key enabler of diversifying away from our reliance on fossil fuels.”
In the second half of this year, Ireland’s EU Presidency will emphasise the need for accelerated deployment of renewable energy, particularly wind, solar and emerging offshore technologies, to deliver clean and affordable power for citizens and businesses. Increased renewable availability reduces exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets and strengthens Europe’s strategic autonomy.
Ireland has an ambitious offshore wind programme, targeting 5GW of capacity in construction by 2030, and 37GW by 2050.
The North Seas Summit follows the extremely successful Tonn Nua offshore auction result announced in Ireland in December, which procured an additional 900 megawatts of renewable energy capacity at a very competitive price, giving a much-needed boost to the global offshore wind sector.
O’Brien’s engagement at the summit includes a closed ministerial meeting on the offshore financing framework, participating in a stakeholder panel on “Ensuring a Business Case for Offshore Wind”, and chairing a roundtable discussion with high level delegates on offshore renewable hydrogen.
Read more in The Guardian here

















































