News

Germany, Denmark sign offshore wind power cooperation deal

EN

Germany and Denmark have signed an agreement to connect at least 3 GW of wind energy generation capacity on the Danish island of Bornholm to the mainland by the beginning of the 2030s, the German economy ministry said on Thursday.

"The project creates the basis for future green electricity imports to Germany and makes our electricity supply cheaper, safer and more independent of fossil fuels," German economy minister Robert Habeck said in a statement.

According to the agreement, 2 GW will be transmitted to Germany and 1.2 GW go to mainland Denmark, the statement said.

The transmission system operators (transmission system operators, TSOs) 50Hertz and Energinet - of Germany and Denmark respectively - have agreed in to each bear half of the costs of the project.

Last month,  leaders from seven  European Union countries, including France, Germany and the Netherlands, alongside non-EU countries Norway and Britain, pledged to accelerate their expansion of wind farms, develop "energy islands" - or connected renewable generation sites at sea - and work on carbon capture and renewable hydrogen projects in the region.

Related Topics
Shell buys 1.1 GW of solar projects in Spain
Acen wins approval to build Australia’s biggest battery
Back

More from Renewable Energy Certificate

TOP
Download request

Please fill out the form to download samples.

Name
Company
Job title
Company email
By using this site, you agree with our use of cookies.