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EDF warns of delays to Hinkley due to pandemic
Hinkley had been originally due to come online in 2025 when it was given the go-ahead in 2016
23 May 2021 • 6:00am
EDF has warned that the coronavirus pandemic could cause major delays to its £23bn Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant.
Talks are continuing between the French state-owned power business and British officials about potential hold-ups caused by the Covid crisis.
Hinkley’s start date has already been pushed back to June 2026 due to a six-month delay caused by the pandemic. It was originally due to come online in 2025 when it was given the go-ahead in 2016.
British parts for British wind farms: Government tightens supply chain criteria for clean power projects
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Dogger Bank, the world s largest wind farm, is supprted by CfD | Credit: Equinor
BEIS confirms plans to strengthen supply chain rules for projects receiving Contract for Difference payments in bid to stimulate growth of local economies
The government has confirmed it is tightening the rules governing its renewables subsidy regime ahead of the fourth round of clean power contract auctions later this year, announcing last week it will.
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RenewableUK calls for introduction of 2030 green hydrogen and onshore wind goals
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EDF s 4.1MW Burnfoot Hill wind farm in central Scotland
Dedicated goals for onshore and floating wind technologies, green hydrogen, and marine energy would drive investment in the sector and set example ahead of COP26 Summit, trade group argues
RenewableUK has called on the government to establish dedicated 2030 capacity targets for onshore wind, floating wind, green hydrogen, and marine energy deployment, arguing that clear goals for different clean energy technologies would accelerate progress towards the UK s near-term climate goals.
In a report published this morning, the trade body has urged the government to match its commitment to deliver 40GW of offshore wind capacity by the end of the decade with similar plans to deliver 30GW of onshore wind, 2GW of floating wind, 1GW of marine energy, and 5GW of green hydrogen capacity.
The Low Carbon Contracts Company (LCCC) has revealed that six projects representing 5500MW of offshore wind capacity have now passed their first Contracts for Difference milestone.
The projects, detailed below, were awarded CfDs in the third Allocation Round of the scheme (AR3), as announced in 2019.
The projects that have passed their Milestone Requirement (MR) are Dogger Bank A (1.2GW), Dogger Bank B (1.2GW), Dogger Bank C (1.2GW), Sofia (1.4GW), Seagreen (454MW) and Forthwind (12MW).
The MR is the first significant milestone in a CfD project’s journey to becoming operational, as it requires generators to demonstrate their commitment to delivering the project by incurring actual spend equal to 10% of the expected development and construction costs; or by evidencing project commitments.