1 / 27

Management of OrbisEnergy

Management of OrbisEnergy. THE NWES STORY. A social enterprise Set up in 1982 Reach across the East of England Helping 500 businesses a year to start Assisting 3000 people p.a. Winners of Enterprising Britain Experienced operators of workspace. NWES CAPABILTY.

micheal
Download Presentation

Management of OrbisEnergy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Management of OrbisEnergy

  2. THE NWES STORY • A social enterprise • Set up in 1982 • Reach across the East of England • Helping 500 businesses a year to start • Assisting 3000 people p.a. • Winners of Enterprising Britain • Experienced operators of workspace

  3. NWES CAPABILTY • BUSINESS ADVICE – Mentors, Coaches & Advisers • BUSINESS TRAINING – Generic & Specific • PREMISES – 20 Managed Centres; Green Agenda • FINANCE – CDFI, phoenix & Grant Aid, Supply chain support • SECTOR KOWLEDGE – Energy, Engineering, ICT, Etc

  4. OrbisEnergy

  5. Why Lowestoft? • Geographical Centre for Offshore Wind • Twin Harbours of Yarmouth & Lowestoft • Shallow Water, High Wind • Heritage of Marine industries • Energy Cluster - Offshore Supply-chain • Power Park Development

  6. Why Suffolk? • Ports – Harwich, Felixstowe, Lowestoft • Academia – UEA, UCS, Lowestoft College • Support – SCC/EEDA/EEEgr/Ist East/RE • Ethos – Greener County • Infrastructure – Grid - Corridor of Power

  7. SNS Gas • £1b spend per year on O&M • 30% of UK gas supply • 130 Platforms • 50 connected to Bacton • 2 major interconnectors • 1,200 companies in Supply-chain

  8. SNS Gas

  9. Nuclear • Sizewell B equal to 3% of UK electricity • 600,000 homes • Sizewell C projected cost of £2.8b • B has £30m pa economic value to region • Leiston will have 4 reactors • Construction:Decommisioning:Generation

  10. Renewables Status • Energy Supply Crisis - CO2, Cost, Security • Poor Efficiency - More than half goes to heat • Target of 20% Electricity from Renewables by 2020 • Currently only 2% - 20% currently from Nuclear • Remainder coal and Gas – but net importer • 3rd from bottom in Europe in renewables race • Only ahead of Luxemburg and Malta! • No established Wave & Tidal • Greater Gabbard, London Array, Norfolk Bank

  11. Gulliver • 2.75 MW • 126 Metres High • Blades are 10 tonnes each • 92 Metres diameter • Electricity for up to 1,600 homes • New Turbines 5 MW and more

  12. Offshore Wind • North Sea - global leader – 2/3 World Market • 96% of global offshore wind energy 700 MW • >£10b projected capex in next 10 years on Wind • Greater Gabbard £1.5b - 500 MW, 150sq.kil 140 turbines, 1m homes • London Array – 1,000MW • Round 3 – 7.2GW and massive O&M opportunity? • 5 GW forecast installed capacity by 2012 (equal to 5 old nuclear power stations)

  13. ROUND 3 ZONES 1. Moray Firth - Moray Offshore Renewables (75% owned by EDP Renovaveis and 25% by SeaEnergy Renewables) 1.3GW 2. Firth of Forth - SeaGreen Wind Energy (equally owned by SSE Renewables  and Fluor)  3.5GW 3. Dogger Bank - Forewind Consortium (equally owned by SSE Renewables, RWE Npower Renewables, Statoil and Statkraft ) 9GW 4. Hornsea - Siemens Project Ventures and Mainstream Renewable Power (a consortium equally owned by Mainstream and Siemens and involving Hochtief Construction) 4GW 5. Norfolk Bank - East Anglia Offshore Wind (equally owned by Scottish Power Renewables and Vattenfall Vindkraft) 7.2GW 6. Hastings Zone, Eon Climate and Renewables UK 0.6GW 7. West of Isle of Wight Zone, Eneco New Energy 0.9GW 8. Bristol Channel  Zone, RWE Npower Renewables (subsidiary of RWE Innogy) 1.5GW 9. Irish Sea Zone, Centrica Renewable Energy and involving RES Group 4.2GW Total of 32.2GW

  14. OrbisEnergy

  15. Meetings

  16. Offices

  17. Structural Design

  18. Environmental Design

  19. Thermal Modelling

  20. Heating & Cooling • Mechanical under-floor supply ventilation • Monodraft roof ventilation • Perimeter & core space heating • Biomass pellet boiler • VRV system for simultaneous heating & cooling • Solar array - hot water generation • BMS to operate systems efficiently

  21. Building Advantages • 35,000 square foot 36 offices • 220 seat conference centre • Energy “A” Rating – BREEAM V. Good • Low Carbon Strategy - Green travel plan • Access to Added-Value support • Located centre of SNS and Power Park

  22. Power Park • Builds on marine heritage • Positioning for emerging growth sector • Physical site in Lowestoft • O&M - (harbour, heliport, supply-chain) • Sub regional reach to Great Yarmouth • Regional reach as a hub

  23. Management of OrbisEnergy

More Related