OEG has secured a multi-million-pound contract to back the 1GW Inch Cape offshore wind farm through construction to 2027.
More than 100 OEG staff will deliver integrated marine coordination, topside services, high-voltage work and ancillary port support.
The package will be run from the company’s new Edinburgh hub, which provides 24/7 monitoring.
OEG will field up to ten vessels, comprising seven guard craft and three crew transfer boats, alongside navigation buoys and metocean sensors.
The North Sea project lies 15 km off Angus, spans 150 km² and will install up to 72 turbines plus an offshore substation.
When operational it is expected to power the equivalent of over half the homes in Scotland, helping meet 2030 UK and Scottish targets.
OEG chief executive John Heiton said the award “demonstrates the strength of our integrated service offering and the trust placed in us”.
He added that in-house delivery “reduces complexity and cost for our new client”.
Inch Cape project director John Hill said trusted, experienced suppliers are “vital” as offshore construction ramps up.
Pictured: Left-right: David Sharp, Senior Construction Manager, Inch Cape Offshore and Billy Hamilton, Topside Director, OEG


