The research vessel Fugro Voyager arrived in Dun Laoghaire Harbour on Wednesday, March 11th, using the multipurpose berth at Carlisle Pier.
As Afloat reported in January, the Bahamas-flagged vessel is in Irish waters supporting geotechnical investigations for the proposed Oriel offshore wind project in the Irish Sea.
Operated by Fugro, the 82.9-metre research vessel was built in 2013 and is equipped for offshore survey and seabed investigation work.
Fugro has been contracted by Oriel Windfarm Ltd, a joint venture between ESB and JERA Nex BP, to undertake detailed geotechnical site investigations.
The work will help inform the design and installation of foundations for the 375-megawatt wind farm planned off the coast of County Louth.
According to Fugro, the winter campaign includes cone penetration testing, wireline geophysics and laboratory analysis of seabed samples.
The vessel is fitted with Fugro’s SEADEVIL coring system, designed to recover high-quality undisturbed soil samples in complex offshore environments.
Survey work is being carried out in water depths of up to 33 metres.
Harbour Arrival – Fugro Voyager passes the East Pier lighthouse entering Dun Laoghaire Harbour to berth at Carlisle Pier while supporting geotechnical survey work for the Oriel offshore wind farm Photo: Afloat
The Oriel offshore wind project received Maritime Area Consents in 2022 as part of Ireland’s first group of Phase One offshore wind developments.
Developers said in 2023 that they would continue work on the Oriel offshore wind project, even though it did not win a contract in Ireland’s first offshore wind auction.
In Ireland’s first offshore wind auction under the Offshore Renewable Electricity Support Scheme (ORESS 1), projects such as Oriel Wind Farm failed to secure contracts mainly because only a limited number of projects with the most competitive electricity prices and strongest development readiness were selected.
The arrival of Fugro Voyager is the latest commercial vessel call at Dun Laoghaire Harbour’s Carlisle Pier berth as offshore wind activity increases in the Irish Sea.

















































