‘Wind wars' erupt in North Sea as giant turbines compete for power
How can you amicably resolve this dispute with your neighbour?
This is the question facing wind farm developers across the North Sea today, as their neighbourhood becomes increasingly crowded.
Yet in this case it's not the views that are being ruined, but the wind – and the stakes are significantly higher.
Through a phenomenon quaintly described as the 'wake effect' by academics, Britain's biggest wind farm owners fear the wind is literally being taken out of their sails.
It is a problem that threatens to cost the likes of Ørsted, RWE, Scottish Power, Total and Equinor billions of pounds without resolution, with the companies waging war in the planning system over who will take precedence – and who picks up the bill.
Flustered industry insiders have even coined a term for it: wind theft.
In recent months, the issue has caught the attention of ministers amid concern that it risks creating unhelpful turbulence for Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, as he seeks to steer the country towards a clean power system by 2030.
To ensure wind theft doesn't blow him off course, Miliband recently commissioned a national study led by Manchester University that will establish a proven method for calculating the wake effect, how it impacts revenues and how to prevent or resolve neighbourly disputes.
The goal is to avoid the sort of scenes unfolding off the coast of Europe, where Belgium is being blamed for stealing wind from the Dutch, and the Dutch are themselves accused of sapping gusts claimed by Germany.
'The main problem for the wind industry is that there is currently a lot of uncertainty,' says Pablo Ouro, a renewable energy expert who is leading the Manchester University study. 'And uncertainty is not good news for financial projects.'
Wind theft happens when air hits the turbines of one wind farm and is disrupted, leaving behind less powerful air flows for wind farms positioned further downstream.
It had not been much of a problem for the offshore wind industry until relatively recently. But there is only so much seabed that is suitable for fixed wind turbines, and the turbines themselves are growing in size.
As recently as the mid-2010s, a typical turbine was just shy of 200 metres tall. Now, monsters like the world's largest turbine being built in Bradenberg, Germany, can reach as high as 364 metres – higher than London's Shard skyscraper.
And as the turbines grow bigger, so do their wakes. This means that for upcoming projects, the wake effect of one wind farm can easily still hit another as far as 37 miles (60km) away, says Ouro.
The extent to which this saps the output of the affected wind farm might be relatively small. Yet when this is compounded over many years, the financial consequences can be disastrous for developers.
'The differences from the wake effect are not huge, in the sense that there will not be an impact of more than say 4pc to 5pc,' Ouro says. 'But actually, for a relatively large wind farm over more than one year, that's a lot of money.
'So even if it's a small chunk, it has a quite large impact on the losses.'
Earlier this year, for example, Ørsted and Equinor complained that Total's proposed Outer Dowsing wind farm off the Yorkshire coast could cost them a combined £363m in lost revenues.
Ørsted estimated that the scheme would affect its existing Race Bank, Hornsea 1 and Hornsea 2 projects, sapping 0.52pc, 0.67pc and 0.68pc of their outputs respectively at a total cost of up to £199m.
Meanwhile, Equinor says its Dudgeon and Sheringham Shoal projects will lose 0.88pc and 0.76pc respectively, with planned extensions also set to suffer. The company predicts the cumulative impacts could amount to up to £164m in lost revenues.
Elsewhere, Scottish Power owner Iberdrola alleges that RWE's proposed Five Estuaries project will reduce the output of its East Anglia 2 wind farm by as much as 2.1pc.
That has prompted RWE to hit back and accuse its rival of hypocrisy: East Anglia 2 is sapping the wind of its Galloper or Greater Gabbard wind farms, it says.
And yet another row is raging in the Irish Sea, where Ørsted is duking it out with EnBW, BP and Flotation Energy over the effects upcoming projects could have on its existing portfolio.
All told, around 20 gigawatts (GW) of wind projects are now ensnared in wind theft disputes, according to the consultancy Tamarindo.
Kester Gunn, the renewables chief scientist for RWE, which is a partner in the national wake effect study, has warned that settling such disputes is tricky business.
Calculating precise numbers for impacts is made harder by the constantly changing wind direction, although the prevailing wind in the UK is generally from the south-west.
'Full wake mitigation between wind farms is not possible, but wind farms are designed so that the wake effects between the turbines are reduced as much as possible,' Gunn said in a recently published article.
'When we assess wake losses we have to take the average effect over all weather conditions. Even very large wake effects for one wind direction tend to average out to very small impacts – less than 1pc – over the year.'
Equinor, a leading partner in the giant Dogger Bank wind farm development in the North Sea, said wake effects were a serious threat to future developments.
'These effects are too often underestimated,' a spokesman says.
The tension building over wake conflicts is so great that it could undermine Miliband's plans to turbocharge offshore wind capacity.
The UK has about 2,800 offshore wind turbines with about 15GW of generation capacity today. Miliband wants to more than triple this to 50GW by 2030, with even more planned after that.
Overall there is about 77GW of capacity in the planning pipeline, roughly equating to 8,000 turbines to be added to the 2,800 already in place.
As development gathers pace, so is pressure for a more systematic approach to wind theft.
Until now, such conundrums have been dealt with by the Planning Inspectorate on an ad-hoc basis.
But Miliband's decision to commission the Manchester study underlines a view in Whitehall that a proper framework is now needed to deal with disputes.
The Government says the Crown Estate, which is responsible for leasing seabed to wind farm developers, already takes some measures to reduce wake effects, such as ensuring there are 'buffer zones' between wind farms.
But a spokesman adds that officials soon hope to develop 'clearer guidance to manage wind wakes' following the Manchester study.
'It's likely that any solution or mitigation will mean changes to the way these buffer zones are designed,' the spokesman says.
Further down the line, some industry insiders are also lobbying for a compensation regime to be agreed for wind farms that lose out from the wake effect.
'The main disagreement is actually, do we have models that capture the dynamics of these inter-wind farm wake effects?', says Manchester's Ouro.
'That's what this project is trying to do. And we're working with the industry to improve the confidence in these models, because, in the end, we all know that wake effects are not going away.'
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
UK independent space agency scrapped to cut costs
The UK Space Agency will cease to exist as an independent entity to cut the cost of bureaucracy, the government said on Wednesday. It will be absorbed by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) in April 2026. The government says this will save money, cut duplication and ensure ministerial oversight. But one leading space scientist said the move would lead to disruption in the short term and the UK losing ground to its international competitors over the long run. Dr Simeon Barber of the Open University feared that scrapping UKSA would lead to Britain's space sector "losing focus". "Around the world countries have been recognising the importance of space by setting up national space agencies, and for the government to be scrapping ours seems like a backward step," he said. UKSA was created 2010 in response to the growing importance of the sector to the economy. The development of small spacecraft, satellites and space instrumentation is a field that the UK excels at, thanks in part due to the agency. Its role is to develop the country's space strategy, coordinate research and commercial activities and liaise with international partners. During its tenure UKSA saw a UK astronaut, Tim Peake launched into space to work on the International Space Station and the development of Britain's own capability to launch small satellites and other small payloads into space from Scotland. The space sector generates an estimated £18.6bn a year and employs 55,000 people across the country. The agency, its budget and activities will now be absorbed into DSIT. It follows a commitment from Prime Minister Keir Starmer to reduce costs and cut the number of arms length government bodies, known as quangos (quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisations), starting with the abolition of NHS England announced in March. Space minister Sir Chris Bryant said: "Bringing things in house means we can bring much greater integration and focus to everything we are doing while maintaining the scientific expertise and the immense ambition of the sector." The merger will see the agency become a unit within DSIT, staffed by experts from both organisations and retaining the UKSA name. But supporters of the space agency, such as Dr Barber fear that this will mean a loss of the agency's dynamic, proactive approach which has proved to be so successful for the UK's space science and its space industry. He said there was a danger of moving to more bureaucratic, less incentivised ways of working, which he said were more typical of government departments, and were the reason the agency was created in the first place. "It feels like we're going to get stuck in the mud again," he told BBC News.

Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
‘Star Wars' actor Mark Hamill reveals he considered leaving the US when Trump won reelection
"Star Wars" actor Mark Hamill revealed to a UK newspaper that President Donald Trump's election nearly convinced him to leave America, telling his wife their options were moving to London or Ireland. Hamill is known for playing Luke Skywalker in the "Star Wars" films and for voicing the Joker in many "Batman" adaptations. He is also one of Hollywood's most outspoken liberal actors — a fact The Times' contributing editor Matt Rudd observed amid his lengthy interview. "Today he fights not with a lightsaber but with a keyboard," Rudd wrote. "Having left Facebook because he was mad at Zuckerberg and Twitter because he was mad at Musk, he now expresses his horror at the state of America via Bluesky." The writer noted further, "I avoid mentioning Trump until the end of our conversation because it's a subject that risks hijacking an entire afternoon. Sure enough, my late request for Hamill's state of the union results in a lengthy monologue." During the extensive interview with the British daily newspaper, Hamill was candid about the struggles he endured after Trump won the election in November. He was an outspoken supporter of then-President Joe Biden and also supported former Vice President Kamala Harris as Biden's appointed successor for the Democratic Party's nomination. The reality of the Trump administration, he says, is only something he can cope with by imagining it as a political thriller. "The bullying, the incompetence, the people in place… The only way I can deal with it without going crazy and wanting to open my veins in a warm tub is to look at it like a thick, sprawling political novel," the 'Star Wars' actor said. "It's entertaining in a way because this could actually be the end. Our status in the world has been crippled and that will reverberate for decades. Making Canada a 51st state? Do you know how offensive that is? And then taking over Greenland and renaming the Gulf of Mexico. The distractions are hilarious." "I still believe there are more honest, decent people than there are the Maga crowd," he says. "If I didn't, I'd move back to England," Hamill added. The actor noted that he indeed considered moving elsewhere in the English-speaking world as other famous liberal actors have done. The Times noted that "when Trump was re-elected, [Hamill] gave his wife a choice: London or Ireland." "She's very clever," Hamill said, recalling the conversation. "She didn't respond right away but a week later she said, 'I'm surprised you would allow him to force you out of your own country.' That son of a b----, I thought. I'm not leaving." Fox News Digital reached out to the White House, and a spokeswoman blasted the actor."Since Mark has decided to stay in the United States, he will get to enjoy the many wins President Trump is securing for the American people — and really, who can blame him for seconding guessing a plan to move to the same place as Rosie O'Donnell…" the White House spokeswoman replied.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Government strikes returns deal with Iraq in latest bid to deter small boats
The Government has agreed a new deal with Iraq to return illegal migrants as part of wider moves to limit small boat crossings. The deal, signed by Home Office minister Dan Jarvis, will set up a formal process to return Iraqis who have arrived in the UK with no right to stay in the country. It comes after an £800,000 deal last year with Baghdad to help the country crack down on smuggling networks and organised crime. Earlier this year Sir Keir Starmer and Iraq's prime minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani agreed to strengthen co-operation on migration. Mr Jarvis signed the agreement during a visit to the UK by Iraq's deputy foreign minister Faud Hussein. The Home Office said the accord would allow the 'swift' return of illegal migrants. Home Office statistics said since previous deals, the number of Iraqis arriving in the UK by small boat has fallen to 1,900 in the year to March 2025, down from 2,600 in the previous year. Mr Jarvis said: 'By working together on security, development and migration challenges, we are building stronger relationships that benefit both our countries whilst tackling shared challenges like organised crime and irregular migration.' The returns deal is the latest as part of the Home Office's policies to stop small boats crossing the channel. Similar agreements have already been made with Albania and Vietnam since Labour came into power. Another deal with France recently came into force, where small boat migrants who have arrived over the English Channel from the French coast can be returned to the country. The small boats migrant will then be exchanged for a legitimate asylum seeker in France who can demonstrate a genuine family link to the UK. The number has been capped, but it is hoped it will act as a deterrent to those crossing the Channel. The latest figures from the Home Office showed 116 migrants arrived aboard two small boats on August 15. Mr Jarvis said: 'This visit reinforces the strength of the UK-Iraq partnership and demonstrates our government's commitment to serious diplomacy that delivers real results. 'As someone who served in Iraq, I understand first-hand the importance of building enduring relationships in the region, and the new agreement we have signed is a testament to the trust and co-operation we've built with our Iraqi counterparts.' However, the announcement was criticised by Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp. He said: 'Over 50,000 illegal immigrants have crossed the Channel in Labour's short time in power, the worst illegal immigration crisis in our history. 'Labour has surrendered our borders, and the consequences are being felt in our communities, from rising crime to shocking cases of rape and sexual assault by recent arrivals. 'Now they boast about a measly returns deal with Iraq, but barely any small boat arrivals are Iraqi, and most would qualify for asylum anyway. It's a sham designed to look tough while crossings keep soaring. 'Labour has scrapped Conservative deterrents and created the conditions for chaos, leaving the British people to foot the bill. Only the Conservatives will stop the crossings and restore control of Britain's borders.'



