TechWorks Marine has completed an oceanographic survey for the 500MW Clogherhead offshore wind project off Ireland for ESB and Parkwind.
The 12-month oceanographic campaign was carried out in the north eastern Irish Sea.
Three metocean data buoys were deployed within the wind park area and along the export cable route, to provide high resolution data on sea state (currents and waves) and water quality.
Data was collected in real-time using satellite communication and provided to our clients through our secure CoastEye data platform.
Earth Observation satellite data was also provided for some of the water quality parameters, which was validated by the metocean buoy measurements.
TechWorks Marine designed the metocean buoys specific to the client requirements, including all oceanographic sensors, vessel provision for deployment, servicing and recovery, real-time ongoing data quality control, and the final data report, which included an intercomparison with an initial site model which had been previously developed prior to this baseline survey.
Project director on behalf of TechWorks Marine Sinead McGlynn said: “We were delighted to have won this contract with ESB and Parkwind through a competitive tender process; oceanographic surveys such as these are critical to the engineering design of offshore wind parks such as this one at Clogherhead.
“We are looking forward to building and growing on this project and other similar ones with both ESB and Parkwind”.
Clogherhead project director Conor Martin added: “The successful completion of the Metocean survey by TechWorks Marine is a key step in the development of the Clogherhead Offshore Wind Farm.
“The essential data that will be provided from this will enable informed decisions for the design and delivery of the Clogherhead project.
“This is so important as it is offshore wind projects like this that will be very much at the centre of our goal to reach net zero by 2040 at ESB.”


