The European Commission has approved Polish plans to use around €194 million (900 million zloty) of EU funds towards construction of a terminal for offshore wind farms in the city of Gdańsk.

The terminal will be located at the Baltic Hub – Poland’s largest container port – and will facilitate the installation and servicing of wind turbines in the Baltic Sea as part of Poland’s plans to generate up to 51% of electricity from renewables by 2040.

The funds will be allocated as part of the so-called National Reconstruction Plan (known as KPO in Polish), an implementation of the EU’s post-pandemic Recovery and Resilience Facility (RFF).

The total cost of the investment is estimated at 1.2 billion zloty (€253 million), with Istrana – the company responsible for the development of the Baltic Hub – covering the remaining 300 million zloty. European Commission approval was required for Poland to grant state aid to Istrana.

Construction will start at the beginning of the third quarter of this year and the terminal is expected to become operational in 2026. To accommodate the new facility, the Baltic Hub will be expanded by 21 hectares.

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Though Poland currently has no offshore wind farms, it plans to make them a key element of its green transition. The country’s current official energy plan anticipates offshore wind capacity reaching 5.9 GW by 2030 and 11 GW by 2040.

However, a more ambitious updated draft published last year by the previous government raised the latter figure to 18 GW and set a goal of generating 51% of Poland’s power from renewables by 2040.

Currently, Poland generates around two thirds of its electricity from coal, which is the highest proportion in Europe. Last year, however, it produced a record 26% of power from renewables, up from 19.3% the previous year.

The construction of Poland’s first offshore wind farm is set to begin this year. Known as Baltic Power, it is a joint venture between Polish state energy giant Orlen and NP Baltic Wind, a subsidiary of Canada’s Northland Power.

The wind farm will be located around 23 kilometres off Poland’s Baltic coast and will comprise 76 turbines, each 250 metres tall and with a unit capacity of 15 MW. Orlen estimates that, once completed, the project will supply around 3% of Poland’s electricity needs.

Last year, the project secured €3.6 billion in loans from 25 Polish and international financial institutions, including the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which will cover 80% of its costs.

Main image credit: National Renewable Energy/Flickr (under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

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