60GW by 2030 just by wind? Is that total or additional? Any idea what we're at currently (peek capacity)?
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Created 23/07/23
The UK has today hit a historic milestone of 30 gigawatts (30,000 megawatts) of wind generation capacity. The opening of SSE Renewables’ Viking Wind Farm on the Shetland Islands boosted the country’s capacity by 443MW, taking the total past the 30GW threshold.
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The UK’s first commercial onshore wind farm, Delabole in Cornwall, went operational in 1991, and the first offshore wind project off the coast of Blyth in the north east of England began generating in 2000. Initially, wind deployment climbed slowly to 1GW in 2005 and grew to 5GW in 2010, before expanding rapidly to 10GW in 2013 and 15GW in early 2017. Capacity has subsequently doubled in just seven years to reach the 30GW milestone.
It's split almost 50/50 with offshore capacity currently running at 14.7GW, onshore at 15.6GW. Source.
Considering the criminal underinvestment in onshore under the Tories that is still an impressive amount and shows how we can really push that angle hard too.
So the government plan to get to 60GW of offshore is... ambitious. Doable if you include onshore.
60GW would be about 50% over capacity for our national needs. That's the sort of level where the gaps can be made up through solar and storage.
windmills are a social construct.