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Monday, 14 September 2009

08:00 - 10:00 REGISTRATION + WELCOME COFFEE + POSTER VIEWING





10:00 - 12:30 : OPENING SESSION (ROOM K1)

Session description

The opening session will feature leading political figures, who will deliver their vision on the future of offshore wind power from national, European and global perspectives.


POLICY Track
 
Andreas Nauen, CEO, Siemens Wind Power & European Offshore Wind 2009 Conference Chair  
AP1.1 
 
Andris Piebalgs, EU Energy Commissioner  
AP1.2 
 
Maud Olofsson, Deputy Prime Minister of Sweden and Swedish Minister of Enterprise and Energy  
AP1.3 
 
Eamon Ryan, Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Ireland  
AP1.4 
 
David Kidney, Under Secretary of State for the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), United Kingdom  
AP1.5 
 
Arthouros Zervos, President, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)  
AP1.6 
PRESENTATION OF THE 2009 POUL LA COUR PRIZE TO 
Mechtild Rothe, Former Vice President of the European Parliament  
AP1.7 


12:00 - 14:00 PRESS CONFERENCE + LUNCH BUFFET – EXHIBITION HALL + POSTER VIEWING





14:00 - 15:30 : PROJECT DELIVERY: CASE STUDIES AND LESSONS LEARNED

Room K1

Chairs:
Matthias Rapp, Swedish Wind Energy Association
Adam Bruce, Mainstream Renewable Power, Ireland

Session description

A wealth of experience is being accumulated by a number of companies operating offshore as a result of experiences accumulated from involvement in past an ongoing offshore wind projects. This session will allow attendees to learn from the experiences of those involved in developing Burbo Bank, Thornton Bank, Horns Rev II, Prinses Amalia and Belwind.

With offshore wind projects becoming larger, further from the shore, and in deeper waters, learning from past experiences, and understanding how to overcome challenges, is increasingly vital for successful project implementation.


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
EFFICIENT INSTALLATION OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES – ALSO IN THE FUTURE – INCLUDING A CASE STUDY: BURBO BANKS OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Rasmus Lund, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
AI3.1 
FROM PROJECT PLANS TO POWER PRODUCTION: LESSONS LEARNED IN THE CONSTRUCTION AND EXPLOITATION OF THE FIRST FAR SHORE WIND FARM IN THE NORTH SEA 
Filip Martens, C-Power, Belgium  
AI3.2 
FROM PIONEERING TO INDUSTRIALISING OFFSHORE WIND: LESSONS LEARNED FROM HORNS REEF II 
Christina Grumstrup Soerensen, DONG Energy , Denmark  
AI3.3 
ALPHA-VENTUS: POWER PLANT ON THE OPEN SEA 
Wilfried Hube, Doti, Germany  
AI3.4 
LEARNING BY DOING: HOW TO ENSURE THAT LESSONS LEARNED IN ONE WIND FARM ARE IMPLEMENTED IN THE NEXT WIND FARM. THE CASES OF PRINSES AMALIA AND BELWIND WIND FARMS 
Bernard Van Hemert, Evelop Netherlands bv, The Netherlands  
AI3.5 


14:00 - 15:30 : RESEARCH PROGRAMMES AND TEST FACILITIES

Room K2

Chairs:
Nicolas Fichaux, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)
Rogier Nijssen, WMC, The Netherlands

Session description

The wind industry has identified the need for increased knowledge of offshore wind turbine reliability and performance as a key element in lowering the risks and costs of energy. Predicted market volumes justify the building of dedicated test and demonstration facilities. Numerous initiatives have been launched, aimed at improving the knowledge base and expanding the scientific and experimental infrastructure. These efforts are now starting to bear fruit; research programmes have been approved and initiated, and the implementation of unique test facilities for large scale wind applications is well on its way. During this session, the speakers will report on the objectives, specifications, and results of research for the advancement of offshore wind technology, including their visions on the future of co-operation on research and testing, and its advantages.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
INTRODUCTION ON TP WIND AND TEST FACILITIES 
Nicolas Fichaux, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)  
AT3.1 
THE TECHNICAL MONITORING PROGRAMME AT OFFSHORE WIND FARM EGMOND AAN ZEE 
Jaap 't Hooft, SenterNovem, The Netherlands  
AT3.2 
FIRST RESULTS OF HANSEN’S 13MW TEST FACILITY FOR WIND TURBINE GEARBOXES 
Joris Peeters, Hansen Transmissions International, Belgium  
AT3.4 
RESEARCH GOES OFFSHORE - ALPHA VENTUS READY FOR RAVE RESEARCH ACTIVITIES  
Michael Durstewitz, ISET e.V., Germany  
AT3.5 
VERIFICATION OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES - THE OWEA PROJECT AT “ALPHA VENTUS” 
Martin Kühn, Universität Stuttgart, Germany  
AT3.6 
FULL-SCALE TEST FACILITIES - ENSURING RELIABILITY FOR OFFSHORE WIND 
Richard Court, NaREC, United Kingdom  
AT3.3 


14:00 - 15:30 : SPATIAL PLANNING AND SITING

Room K11

Chairs:
Andreas Wagner, Stiftung Offshore Windenergie, Germany
Anja Pedersen, Danish Wind Industry Association

Session description

Appropriate maritime spatial planning (MSP) guidelines are a key prerequisite for the rapid expansion of offshore wind energy in European waters.
Different approaches and initiatives that have been taken in the EU and beyond will be presented in this session.
Following the Communication on a Roadmap for Maritime Spatial Planning of November 2008, the European Commission has entered a stakeholder dialogue on the challenges and practical application of key principles for MSP.
This session will look at the key needs of the offshore wind sector with regards to MSP in Europe


ENVIRONMENTAL, POLITICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES Track
OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY: REDUCING CONFLICTS AND OPTIMISING SYNERGIES WITH OTHER OCEAN INDUSTRIES 
Paul Holthus, World Ocean Council, United States of America  
AE3.1 
SPATIAL SOLUTIONS FOR OFFSHORE WIND IN THE NORTH SEA 
Karina Veum, ECN, The Netherlands  
AE3.2 
MULTI CRITERIA TOOL FOR IDENTIFYING THE BEST SITES FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM DEVELOPMENT 
Marios Papalexandrou, Ecofys, The Netherlands  
AE3.3 
TOWARDS A COMMON APPROACH TO MARITIME SPATIAL PLANNING WITHIN THE EU 
Nicklas Amelin, European Comission  
AE4.5 


15:30 - 16:00 COFFEE BREAK + POSTER VIEWING





16:00 - 17:30 : OFFSHORE GRID PLANNING AND OPERATION

Room K1

Chairs:
Niels Ladefoged, European Commission
Jaap Olthoff, NUON, The Netherlands

Session description

With installed capacity expected to grow substantially over the decades to come, the debate over how this capacity should be connected to the existing grid is intensifying.
This session will consider examples of techno-economic studies of offshore wind connection, focusing on the North Sea. Key questions for discussion will include:

• Are simple ("radial") connections likely to prevail as the dominant pattern, or could more integrated solutions gain ground over time?
• To what extent do considerations other than techno-economic merits (e.g. planning, environment, procedural) alter the answer to the first question?
• How can regulatory frameworks and TSOs promote optimal connection solutions, and what more could be done at EU level in this respect?

A related aspect is the potential synergies between interconnectors and wind farm connections which is also the subject of a dedicated session (BG4).


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
TECHNO-ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT OF THE CONNECTION OF 6GW OFFSHORE WIND POWER IN THE NETHERLANDS 
Karsten Burges, Ecofys Germany GmbH, Germany  
AI4.1 
OPTIMAL DESIGN OF A SUBSEA POWER GRID IN THE NORTH SEA 
Thomas Trötscher, SINTEF Energy Research, Norway  
AI4.2 
A DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS OF THE NEW COMPETITIVE REGIME FOR THE PROVISION OF GRID CONNECTIONS FOR UK OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Chris Veal, Transmission Capital, United Kingdom  
AI4.3 
A COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS OF DEVELOPING OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN CONJUNCTION WITH INTERCONNECTORS 
Joe Corbett, Mainstream Renewable Power, United Kingdom  
AI4.4 
PENTALATERAL ENERGY FORUM: TOGETHER FOR AN OFFSHORE GRID 
Philippe Detheux, Ministry of Climate and Energy, Belgium  
AI4.5 
NORTH SEA OFFSHORE WIND 
Teun Van Biert, North Sea Region Working Group, European Network of Transmission System Operators (ENTSO) & TenneT TS, The Netherlands  
AI4.6 


16:00 - 17:30 : WIND RESOURCE ASSESSMENT

Room K2

Chair:
Ndaona Chokani, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
Ignacio Marti, CENER, Spain

Session description

The risk in the performance of a wind energy project is impacted by a large number of parameters, not least of which is the wind resource. A correct estimate of the wind resource can make or break the economics of a wind energy project. Therefore, this resource must be accurately detailed both for the short and long term, and fine & coarse spatial resolutions. A higher level of confidence in the wind resource assessment facilitates the financing and the subsequent operation of the wind energy project. In this session, innovative measurements and computer modelling techniques that are used to detail and exploit the offshore wind resource, over different spatial and temporal scales, will be presented.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
WIND STATISTICS OFFSHORE BASED ON SATELLITE IMAGES 
Charlotte Hasager, Risø DTU, Denmark  
AT4.1 
A NEW WIND MAP FOR THE NORTH SEA - COMBINING THE STRENGTHS OF EARTH OBSERVATION DATA, MESOSCALE MODELLING AND MAST MEASUREMENTS 
Joseph Phillips, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
AT4.2 
IMPROVED MODELLING OF WAKES AND POWER OUTPUT IN LARGE OFFSHORE WIND FARMS BASED ON DATA FROM NYSTED AND HORNS REV 
Leo E. Jensen, DONG Energy, Denmark  
AT4.3 
POWER PERFORMANCE AND WAKE EFFECTS IN THE CLOSELY SPACED LILLGRUND OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Jan-Åke Dahlberg, Vattenfall, Sweden  
AT4.4 
EU-NORSEWIND – ASSESSMENT OF VIABILITY OF OPEN SOURCE CFD CODE FOR THE WIND INDUSTRY  
Matt Stickland, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom  
AT4.5 


16:00 - 17:30 : ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

Room K11

Chairs:
Duncan Ayling, BWEA, United Kingdom
Frauke Thies, Greenpeace European Unit

Session description

Wind energy is one of the cleanest, most environmentally friendly energy sources. It emits no air or water pollutants, nor greenhouse gases. However, at the local and regional levels wind energy can have impacts, in particular on wildlife and/or habitats. Balancing these concerns is a difficult task, and one that requires both a broad understanding of complex issues combined with detailed and specific environmental information.

This session will discuss the most recent scientific methods and tools for analysing bird migration, for quantifying compensatory restoration, and resource use and emissions generated throughout the life cycle of offshore wind projects. Speakers will present their views and practice of integration of environmental concerns and will debate the need for guidelines regarding wind energy development and nature conservation.


ENVIRONMENTAL, POLITICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES Track
"HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?" DETERMINING ADEQUATE LEVELS OF ENVIRONMENTAL COMPENSATION FOR WIND POWER IMPACTS USING EQUIVALENCY ANALYSIS 
Scott Cole, EnviroEconomics Sweden Consultancy, Sweden  
AE4.1 
EXTENDED LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT FOR OFFSHORE WIND POWER 
Anders Arvesen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway  
AE4.2 
NATURE, ENVIRONMENT AND USE FUNCTIONS AT OFFSHORE WIND FARM EGMOND AAN ZEE  
Henk Kouwenhoven, NoordzeeWind, The Netherlands  
AE4.3 
RADAR AND LASER STUDIES ON MIGRATORY BIRDS PROVIDING DATA OF UNSEEN QUALITY 
Gunnild Volund, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
AE4.4 


17:30 - 19:00 EXHIBITION AND POSTER RECEPTION





19:30 - CONFERENCE DINNER




Tuesday, 15 September 2009

08:00 - 09:00 REGISTRATION + WELCOME COFFEE + POSTER VIEWING





09:00 - 10:30 : HARD TALK: OFFSHORE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES (ROOM K1)

Moderator:
Stephen Sackur, BBC, United Kingdom


Session description

Europe's offshore wind potential is enormous and able to power Europe seven times over. This panel will discuss how to overcome the remaining challenges and fully exploit this untapped indigenous resource. Leading figures from the wind industry will discuss issues including: Designing and financing the offshore electricity grid, spatial planning, markets, technology, and ramping up the supply chain (foundations, cables, turbine supply, transportation and installation).


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
 
Christian Kjaer, CEO, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)  
BI1.1 
 
Ian Marchant, CEO, Scottish and Southern Energy, United Kingdom  
BI1.2 
 
Eddie O'Connor, CEO, Mainstream Renewable Power, Ireland  
BI1.3 
 
Konstantin Staschus, Secretary General, European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E)  
BI1.4 
 
Anders Søe Jensen, President, Vestas Offshore, Denmark  
BI1.5 
 
Andreas Nauen, CEO, Siemens Wind Power, Denmark  
BI1.6 


10:30 - COFFEE BREAK + POSTER VIEWING





11:00 - 12:30 : REGIONAL INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION

Room K1

Chairs:
Ray Thompson, One North East, United Kingdom
Loic Blanchard, European Commission

Session description

This session on regional development and job creation will cover the potential impact of the offshore wind industry on the regional economy of coastal areas of Europe. The various regions with offshore plans have different sets of capabilities, challenges and needs. The development of the North Sea region is an example of strong manufacturing capacity and maritime sectors but also a place where maritime potential is at present insufficiently used. In particular, the session will look at skills shortages and training needs, supply chain requirements, and potential synergies with traditional offshore industries, particularly oil and gas. The central question is how to foster/accelerate more regional development across Europe based on this unique set of capabilities, and the opportunity that the climate change challenge presents.


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
AN EXPLORATION OF THE OLD AND THE NEW WORLD OF OFFSHORE ENERGY 
Nial McCollam, Senergy Alternative Energy, United Kingdom  
BI2.1 
UK OFFSHORE WIND: LEADING THE WAY 
Bruce Valpy, UK Renewables, United Kingdom  
BI2.2 
POWER CLUSTER – NEEDS OF EDUCATION AND SUGGESTIONS OF PROGRAMMES AND COURSES FOR OFFSHORE WIND 
Ola Carlson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden  
BI2.3 
PRODUCTION FACILITY DEVELOPMENT FOR OFFSHORE WIND IN GERMANY 
Jan Rispens, Windenergie-Agentur Bremerhaven/Bremen e.V., Germany  
BI2.4 
ESBJERG - LOGISTIC HUB FOR OFFSHORE WIND 
Søren Clemmensen, Port of Esbjerg, Denmark  
BI2.5 


11:00 - 12:30 : SUBSTRUCTURE DESIGN, MANUFACTURING AND NEW CONCEPTS

Room K2

Chairs:
Göran Dalen, WPD, Sweden
Allan MacAskill, Seaenergy Renewables, United Kingdom

Session description

Substructure design and manufacturing is one of the key areas for offshore wind energy. This is where considerable cost savings can be found, which is essential to making offshore wind energy competitive. It is also an area open to innovative thinking to help overcome the harsh offshore environment. The offshore oil and gas industry has a great deal of experience to offer. However, costs must be reduced and the complexity of offshore wind technology should not be underestimated. How can we combine innovative design with mass production resulting in cheap, reliable and safe substructures for future offshore wind energy developments?


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
THE LOGISTICS OF DELIVERING MULTIPLE CONCRETE FOUNDATIONS 
Gordon Jackson, Arup, United Kingdom  
BT2.1 
CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATION STUDY FOR KRIEGERS FLAK 
Göran Loman, Vattenfall, Sweden  
BT2.2 
INNOVATIVE OFFSHORE FOUNDATION SOLUTIONS 
Thomas Østergaard, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
BT2.3 
KRIEGERS FLAK FOUNDATION CONCEPTS - THE DRILLED CONCRETE MONOPILE 
Maarten Van der Veen, Ballast Nedam Offshore, The Netherlands  
BT2.4 
A QUANTITATIVE COMPARISON OF THE RESPONSES OF THREE FLOATING PLATFORM CONCEPTS 
Jason Jonkman, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, United States of America  
BT2.5 


11:00 - 12:30 : OFFSHORE GRID CONNECTION

Room K11

Chair:
Frans van Hulle, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)
Bo Normark, Power Circle / Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences (IVA)

Session description

The session will seek to answer the issue of how to optimally connect wind farms and the electrical network from a technical and economic point of view with due regard to reliability. A design concept of offshore HV AC platforms for connecting large wind farms will be outlined. An integrated design approach will be presented, which reduces the risk by providing an optimised solution for the complete electrical system from single turbine to the fixed grid. The session will also present a methodology for increasing the reliability of offshore wind farms by providing redundancy in the offshore transmission assets in an economically optimised way. Finally, the session will highlight methods of meeting stability requirements and grid compliance by the use of STATCOMS.


GRIDS Track
DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS OF LARGE SCALE INTEGRATION OF OFFSHORE WIND POWER 
Peter Sandeberg, ABB, Sweden  
BG2.1 
REDUCE RISK BY PLANNING OFFSHORE WIND FARMS WITH AN OPTIMISED AND GRID COMPLIANT SOLUTION FOR THE COMPLETE ELECTRICAL SYSTEM – FROM THE SINGLE TURBINE TO THE FIXED GRID  
Jesper Møller, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
BG2.2 
OPTIMISING REDUNDANCY OF OFFSHORE ELECTRICAL INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS BY ASSESSMENT OF OVERALL ECONOMIC COST 
Andrew Henderson, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
BG2.3 
USE OF STATCOM FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM STABILITY AND GRID COMPLIANCE 
Christopher Smith, Converteam UK Ltd, United Kingdom  
BG2.4 
INNOVATIVE PLATFORM SOLUTIONS WITH INTEGRATED DESIGN FOR OFFSHORE AC SUBSTATIONS FROM 60 MW TO 800 MW - EXPERIENCE FROM REALISED PROJECTS AND FUTURE CHALLENGES  
Uwe Gierer, Areva, and Ian Cunningham, Areva  
BG2.5 


12:30 - 14:00 BUFFET LUNCH - EXHIBITION HALL + POSTER VIEWING





14:00 - 15:30 : SUPPLY CHAIN ISSUES

Room K1

Chairs:
Gordon Edge, British Wind Energy Association (BWEA), United Kingdom
Johannes Schiel, VDMA Power Systems, Germany

Session description

In contrast to the onshore wind industry, which managed shortages of components, the capacity of the supply chain to deliver offshore projects looks likely to be the limiting factor in deployment for at least the next decade. The challenges of providing suitable quantities of reliable turbines, cost-effective foundations, purpose-built installation vessels and subsea cables will require strong, proactive measures. Innovation in techniques and equipment will also be key to bringing costs down and building capacity rapidly. The papers in this session will range over this area, with a strong focus on the installation bottleneck, but also with assessments of capacity in turbines, foundations and cables.


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
SECOND GENERATION TRANSPORT AND INSTALLATION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Kurt E. Thomsen, Advanced Offshore Solutions, Denmark  
BI3.1 
GROWING OFFSHORE IN TURBULENT TIMES 
Michael Hannibal, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Germany  
BI3.2 
FORECAST VS. SUPPLY CHAIN – REACHING THE FULL POTENTIAL OF OFFSHORE 
Thomas Karst, MAKE Consulting, Denmark  
BI3.3 
PURPOSE BUILT VESSELS FOR OFFSHORE WIND - THE BEST WAY FORWARD 
Kaj Lindvig, A2SEA A/S, Denmark  
BI3.4 
HOW TO ACHIEVE ASSEMBLY LINE FABRICATION OF SPECIFIC DESIGN 
Henrik Carstens, Rambøll Offshore Wind, Denmark  
BI3.5 
SUPPLY CHAIN CHALLENGES IN PROVIDING THE GRID CONNECTIONS FOR OFFSHORE WIND POWER 
Stefan Jonsson, ABB Grid Systems, Sweden  
BI3.6 


14:00 - 15:30 : NEW CONCEPTS IN OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE TECHNOLOGY

Room K2

Chairs:
Jos Beurskens, ECN, The Netherlands
Peter Hjuler, Risø DTU, Denmark

Session description

Among the wind energy community there is a common notion that dedicated offshore wind turbine designs are needed in order to realise the ambitious goals of various governments and the EU, and to make offshore wind energy more competitive. Currently, offshore wind turbines may be considered derivatives of wind turbines designed for land applications. Features of those dedicated offshore machines include, amongst others, lighter constructions, high speed rotors and design for reliability (simplicity). All of these aspects will be addressed in this session.

Two of the presentations will discuss the first results of multi MW existing wind turbine types, which will provide very valuable input to the debate on reliability. Specific design issues for dedicated offshore wind turbines, including up-scaling, simplicity versus the need for load alleviation and harsh eternal conditions will also be presented in this session. Finally, the most important component of a wind turbine, the rotor, will be discussed in terms of making extreme lightweight blades and increasing the tip speed ratio, both of which are essential elements in realising cost reductions on the longer term.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
LIGHT WEIGHT, HIGH SPEED ROTORS FOR OFFSHORE 
Peter Jamieson, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
BT3.1 
THE BRITANNIA 10MW WIND TURBINE: INNOVATING DESIGN BUILDS COST-EFFECTIVE OFFSHORE TECHNOLOGY 
David Still, Clipper Windpower Marine, United Kingdom  
BT3.2 
AN IDEALISED OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE 
Poul Skjærbæk, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
BT3.3 
TECHNOLOGY AND FIRST OPERATIONAL RESULTS OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE REPOWER 6M 
Jens Goesswein, REpower Systems AG, Germany  
BT3.4 
PROJECT EXPERIENCES FROM THE FIRST 5MW OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE INSTALLATION IN THE OFFSHORE TESTFIELD "ALPHA VENTUS" 
Markus Eichler, ABB, Switzerland  
BT3.5 


14:00 - 15:30 : FORECASTING

Room K11

Chairs:
Hannele Holtinnen, VTT Technical Research Centre, Finland
Colin Morgan, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom

Session description

Energy and power management of large offshore wind power plants will be a challenge for the companies and system operators involved. An accurate wind production forecast, together with uncertainty measures, will be needed. Offshore wind resources differ from those onshore. Issues such as the lack of knowledge regarding meteorological phenomena at sea and the weakness of the existing meteorological network are significant problems. This session will present forecasting techniques and models required to address the challenges of offshore wind power production. How much does the task of forecasting differ offshore from onshore, and how far can we rely on the existing techniques?


GRIDS Track
EXPERIENCES WITH WIND POWER FORECAST IN EUROPE, NORTH AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA 
Ulrich Focken, Energy & Meteo Systems GmbH, Germany  
BG3.1 
FORECASTING OFFSHORE WIND POWER IN PORTUGAL 
Ana Trancoso, Technical Superior Institute, Portugal  
BG3.2 
DEVELOPMENT OF AN OFFSHORE-SPECIFIC WIND POWER FORECASTING MODEL BASED ON ENSEMBLE WEATHER PREDICTION AND WAVE PARAMETERS  
Ümit Cali, EnBW Renewables GmbH, Germany  
BG3.3 
ENSEMBLE PREDICTIONS AND NOWCASTING OF OFFSHORE WIND POWER PRODUCTION 
Jens Tambke, ForWind - Center for Wind Energy Research, Germany  
BG3.4 
MODELLING AND FORECASTING OF WIND POWER FLUCTUATIONS AT LARGE OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Pierre-Julien Trombe, Technical University of Denmark  
BG3.5 


15:30 - 16:00 COFFEE BREAK + POSTER SESSION





16:00 - 17:30 : FINANCING OFFSHORE WIND

Room K1

Chairs:
Ernst van Zuijlen, Evelop Netherlands BV, The Netherlands
Klaus Rave, Fördergesellschaft Windenergie e.V., Germany

Session description

Offshore wind energy is particularly affected by the financial crisis. The volume of debt and the debt to equity relation, as a reflection of the sector specific risks, constitute a unique challenge for the key market players. Recent deals and experiences in the operation of offshore wind farms show the way into a new dimension of project and balance-sheet financing. The session will offer an in-depth look into the subject matter by some of the leading actors in the field. Can sufficient financial resources be mobilised, reflecting the ambitious EU targets related to fighting climate change and the specific contribution offshore wind has to offer?


INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT AND MARKET DEPLOYMENT Track
RABOBANK’S VIEW ON PROJECT FINANCE FOR OFFSHORE WIND 
Marc Schmitz, Rabobank International and Maartje van den Berg, Rabobank International, The Netherlands  
BI4.1 
SHOW ME THE MONEY! PROJECT FINANCING FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM CONSTRUCTION AND OPERATION - WHERE WILL IT COME FROM? 
Eriks Atvars, Unicredit Group (HVB AG), Germany  
BI4.2 
CONSOLIDATION IN OFFSHORE WIND 
Max Ter Linden, Royal Bank of Scotland, The Netherlands  
BI4.3 
RISKS AND ISSUES AFFECTING INVESTMENT AND PROJECT FINANCE FOR OFFSHORE WIND - A LENDER'S ENGINEER PERSPECTIVE 
Simon Luby, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
BI4.4 
FINDING BANK DEBT FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS: WHAT'S POSSIBLE 
Jerome Guillet, Dexia, France  
BI4.5 


16:00 - 17:30 : OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

Room K2

Chairs:
Dorte Buus Jensen, Vestas Offshore, Denmark
Jaco Nies, GE, Germany

Session description

Within the offshore wind business, an increased focus on reducing CoE and improving profitability has resulted in different approaches to decreasing operation and maintenance (O&M) costs. Understanding the environmental conditions under which such activities are performed, choosing the right service setup and service scheme given the individual site and a thorough knowledge of the wind turbines are keys to success.
With wind farms being developed farther and farther offshore, the focus on O&M is growing. This session will elaborate on measures to bring O&M activities and costs under control, to the benefit of current and future wind farms.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE COST ESTIMATOR (OMCE) TO ESTIMATE THE FUTURE O&M COSTS OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Luc Rademakers, ECN, The Netherlands  
BT4.1 
CONDITION BASED MAINTENANCE OF VESTAS OFFSHORE TURBINES 
Jacob Juhl Christensen, Vestas Wind Systems, Denmark  
BT4.2 
NOVEL EARLY WARNING PROGNOSTICS FOR BEARINGS OF WTG GEARBOXES 
Jonathan Wheals, Ricardo UK Ltd, United Kingdom  
BT4.3 
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE COSTS FOR FAR DISTANCE OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Wilhelm Heckmann, Germanischer Lloyd Industrial Services, Germany  
BT4.4 
THE OFFSHORE ACCESS PROBLEM AND TURBINE AVAILABILITY - PROBABILISTIC MODELLING OF EXPECTED DELAYS TO REPAIRS 
Julian Feuchtwang, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom  
BT4.5 


16:00 - 17:30 : COMBINING OFFSHORE INTERCONNECTORS AND WIND FARMS: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES

Room K11

Chairs:
Justin Wilkes, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)
Kai Schlegelmilch, German Federal Environment Ministry (BMU), Germany

Session description

Integrated solutions for grid development and wind farm development in the Baltic and North Seas are increasingly being considered. What opportunities exist to combine offshore wind power production and the trade of electricity between European electricity markets? What are the main challenges in combining grid development and wind farm development and what needs to happen to overcome these challenges?


GRIDS Track
KRIEGERS FLAK AND ITS WAY TO BECOME A BEST PRACTICE AREA - HOW TO FIND A COMMON APPROACH IN THREE DIFFERENT COUNTRIES TOWARDS THREE NEIGHBOURING PROJECTS, WHICH FIND THEMSELVES IN THE FOCUS OF EU POLICIES 
Achim Berge, Wpd Offshore GmbH, Germany  
BG4.1 
PRESENTATION OF KRIEGERS FLAK BY 3 TSOS 
Hanne Kortegaard Nielsen, Energinet.dk, Denmark (in conjunction with Svenska Kraftnät, Sweden and Vattenfall Europe Transmission, Germany)  
BG4.2 
OPPORTUNITY FOR COMBINING OFFSHORE WIND AND INTERCONNECTION 
Paul Cooley, Airtricity, Ireland  
BG4.3 
COMBINING OFFSHORE WIND WITH INTERCONNECTORS IN THE BALTIC SEA 
Mark Porter, E.ON Climate & Renewables, Sweden  
BG4.4 
INTEGRATION OF LARGE VOLUMES OF WIND POWER IN THE NORDIC POWER SYSTEM  
Sture Larsson, Svenska Kraftnät, Sweden  
BG4.5 


19:00 - CONFERENCE RECEPTION




Wednesday, 16 September 2009

08:00 - 09:00 REGISTRATION + WELCOME COFFEE + POSTER VIEWING





09:00 - 10:30 : EU AND NATIONAL POLICIES AND PROGRAMMES

Room K1

Chairs:
Jacopo Moccia, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)
Lars Andersson, Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications, Sweden

Session description

The session will look at the state and growth potentials of the offshore markets around Europe and how governments are tackling and programming this development. The presentations will discuss the role of governments and authorities in finding solutions to supply chain constraints and dealing with applications and authorisations through maritime spatial planning and supportive legislative regimes.


POLICY Track
OCEANS OF OPPORTUNITY: HARNESSING EUROPE'S LARGEST DOMESTIC ENERGY RESOURCE 
Justin Wilkes, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)  
CP1.5 
THE WEIGHT OF OFFSHORE WIND IN THE EU’S VISION FOR 2020 
Marc Muehlenbach, Emerging Energy Research, Spain  
CP1.1 
THE DEVELOPMENT OF OFFSHORE WIND IN UK WATERS 
Alastair Dutton, Round 3 Programme Manager and Allan Taylor, Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC), United Kingdom  
CP1.2 
OFFSHORE START IN 2009 – CURRENT LEGAL CONDITIONS AND POLITICAL SUPPORT IN GERMANY  
Georg Schroth, German Wind Energy Association (BWE), Germany  
CP1.3 
WIND POWER IN SWEDEN 
Fredrik Dahlström, Swedish Energy Agency  
CP1.4 


09:00 - 10:30 : OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE RELIABILITY

Room K2

Chairs:
Stuart Herbert, New and Renewable Energy Centre Ltd (NaREC), United Kingdom
Peter Quell, REpower, Germany

Session description

The economic efficiency of offshore wind farms is highly dependent on the availability and reliability of installed wind energy converters. Due to the relative inaccessibility of offshore sites, maintenance and service works have a considerable influence on the operational costs of offshore wind farms. In order to minimise such financial impacts, risks should be identified, quality methods adapted and new technical solutions investigated. This session will present past experiences with onshore applications and will illustrate concepts and methods of reliability assessment and assurance, as well as highlighting examples of adapted technologies.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
HOW DOES THE SWEPT AREA TO RATING RATIO IMPACT COST OF ENERGY FOR OFFSHORE WIND POWER? 
Anders Bach Andersen, Vestas Technology R&D, Denmark  
CT1A.1 
NEW TECHNIQUES OF RELIABILITY AND THEIR APPLICATION TO OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Michael Starling, BMT Fleet Technology Ltd, United Kingdom  
CT1A.2 
IMPROVED WTG GEARBOX RELIABILITY THROUGH NOVEL CONCEPTS FOR BEARINGS  
Jonathan Wheals, Ricardo UK Ltd, United Kingdom  
CT1A.3 
RELIABILITY OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES – IDENTIFYING RISKS BY ONSHORE EXPERIENCE  
Stefan Faulstich, ISET e.V., Germany  
CT1A.4 
RELIABILTY ASSESMENT AND IMPROVEMENT THROUGH ARM MODELLING 
Poul Skjærbæk, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
CT1A.5 


09:00 - 10:30 : TRANSPORTATION AND INSTALLATION TECHNOLOGIES

Room K11

Chair:
Dolf Elsevier van Griethuysen, Ballast Nedam Offshore Energy, The Netherlands
Govert Hamers, European Technology Platform WATERBORNE

Session description

Europe, and especially its member states around the North Sea, has set itself a series of ambitious but serious targets in the offshore installation of wind turbines. To make this happen, many logistic and technical challenges are inevitably involved. These not only include a sufficient supply of suitable turbines and electricity cables, but also the related urgent need for sufficient, suitable and smart equipment to transport and install all of this from onshore to offshore locations.

Not only are the number of installations per year expected to increase rapidly, but also the size of each unit. This consequently needs to be taken into account in designing technical solutions and in the choice of equipments to be used.

In this session, the speakers will give us their views on how to approach these problems in a more conceptual way and will reveal multiple solutions for transporting and installing foundations, preassembled wind turbines and even a combination of the two.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
NEW OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE INSTALLATION DEVICE DUBBED CASTORO VENTO 
Jacques Ruer, SAIPEM, France  
CT1B.1 
INNOVATIONS IN TRANSPORT AND INSTALLATION METHODS 
Henrik Lynderup, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
CT1B.2 
OPTIMISATION OF THE OFFSHORE WIND FARM INSTALLATION PROCESS 
Aidan Cronin, Merchant Green, Denmark  
CT1B.3 
TRANSPORTATION AND INSTALLATION OF CONCRETE FOUNDATIONS 
Mark Willbourn, BMT Nigel Gee, United Kingdom  
CT1B.4 
LARGE SCALE ASSEMBLY AND ERECTION OF FLOATING OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES 
Anders Myhr, UMB, Norway  
CT1B.5 


10:30 - 11:00 COFFEE BREAK + POSTER VIEWING





11:00 - 12:30 : TRADING OFFSHORE WIND IN THE INTERNAL ELECTRICITY MARKET

Room K1


Paul Wilczek, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)
Achim Woyte, 3E, Belgium

Session description

Today’s electricity markets are driven by daily and seasonal changes in demand, which call on different types of electricity generation with different costs to be dispatched. Ongoing projects such as Kriegers Flak and a future North Sea Grid will create regional markets dominated by large amounts of wind constituting market areas with predominantly low prices. This session will analyse the different impacts of a large in-feed of offshore wind on regional markets in both the North and Baltic Sea against the background of the recent adoption of the 3rd Liberalisation Package. The session will also examine best market design options.


POLICY Track
INTEGRATION OF OFFSHORE WIND GENERATION IN FUTURE ELECTRICITY MARKETS 
Marian Klobasa, Fraunhofer Institute for System and Innovation Research, Germany  
CP2A.1 
DEVELOPING THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK FOR THE INTEGRATION OF OFFSHORE WIND GENERATION IN THE INTERNAL ELECTRICITY MARKET 
Siobhán Carty, Regulatory economist, OFGEM, United Kingdom  
CP2A.2 
MARKET BASED INTEGRATION OF WIND POWER 
Hans Erik Kristoffersen, Energinet.dk and Chair of the ENTSO Renewables Working Group  
CP2A.3 
VIEWS ON HOW OFFSHORE WIND WILL INFLUENCE THE EU ELECTRICTY MARKET  
Matti Supponen, DG TREN, European Commission  
CP2A.4 
INTEGRATION SOLUTIONS FOR LARGE-SCALE WIND POWER IN INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTS 
Bart Ummels, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands  
CP2A.5 


11:00 - 12:30 : PANEL: INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

Room K2

Moderator:
Mark Ennis, Airtricity, Ireland


Session description

The panel discussion will be based around the main themes of the ‘European Policy Workshop on Offshore Wind Power Deployment’, namely: market mechanisms, marine spatial planning and grids. Dedicated to improving the framework conditions for offshore wind power deployment, earlier editions of this workshop took place in Berlin (December 2007), the "Copenhagen Strategy" (2005) and Egmond (October 2004).


POLICY Track
 
Peter Brun, Senior Vice President and Head of Government Relations, Vestas  
CP2B.1 
 
Tiago Cunha, Member of Cabinet of Commissioner Joe Borg, European Commission  
CP2B.2 
 
Duarte Figueira, Head of the Renewables Deployment Team, Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), United Kingdom  
CP2B.3 
 
Reinhard Kaiser, Deputy Director General, Head of Department of Renewable Energies, Federal Environment Ministry (BMU), Germany  
CP2B.4 
 
Tomas Kåberger, Director General, Swedish Energy Agency  
CP2B.5 
 
Teun Van Biert, North Sea Region Working Group, European Network of Transmission System Operators (ENTSO-E) & TenneT TS, The Netherlands  
CP2B.6 
 
Justin Wilkes, Head of Regulatory Affairs, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA)  
CP2B.7 


11:00 - 12:30 : STANDARDS, CERTIFICATION, DESIGN CONDITIONS AND METHODS

Room K11

Chairs:
Mike Anderson, RES, United Kingdom
David Boye, DNV Wind Energy, Denmark

Session description

The economic viability of offshore wind project depends on many parameters. One of the most important is understanding the wave loading and its coupled interaction with the supporting structure.

This session will present:
• Innovative modelling techniques for assessing the impact of wave loading on the supporting structure.
• The impact of misaligned wave loading on cross wind vibrations and its mitigation through the introduction of tower dampers.
• The role certification and quality control/assurance plays in reducing risks to financers and developers.


TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION Track
COMPARING SOURCES OF DAMPING OF CROSS-WIND MOTION 
Niels Jacob Tarp-Johansen, DONG Energy, Denmark  
CT2.1 
WAVE RUN-UP: AN ENGINEERING MODEL 
Erik Asp Hansen, DNV Wind Energy, Denmark  
CT2.2 
VALIDATION OF OFFSHORE LOAD SIMULATIONS USING MEASUREMENT DATA FROM THE DOWNVIND PROJECT  
Marc Seidel, REpower Systems AG, Germany  
CT2.3 
QUALITY CONTROL AND QUALITY ASSURANCE IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS – VESTAS OFFSHORE’S APPROACH  
Helle Malling, Vestas Offshore A/S, Denmark  
CT2.4 
NO OFFSHORE WIND FARM WITHOUT CERTIFICATION  
Matthias Laatsch, Germanischer Lloyd Industrial Services, Germany  
CT2.5 


12:30 - 14:00 : CLOSING RECEPTION (K FOYER)





13:00 - BUFFET LUNCH– EXHIBITION HALL




All day - PO: POSTER SESSION


RADICAL RETHINK FOR OFFSHORE ENERGY PRODUCTION STUDIES 
Paul Van Lieshout, Sinclair Knight Merz, United Kingdom  
PO.1 
OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY - A CHALLENGE TO THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY 
Patrick Wendisch, Roland Offshore Insurance Agency GmbH & Co KG, Germany  
PO.3 
PROFITABILTY ANALYSIS OF OFFSHORE WIND PARKS IN GERMANY 
Markus Marnett, RWTH Aachen University, Germany  
PO.4 
MANAGING INSURANCE EXPECTATIONS FOR FUTURE OFFSHORE WIND PROJECTS 
Ben Sheppard, Aon , United Kingdom  
PO.5 
OFFSHORE: EMERGING MARKETS IN THE MIDST OF GERMANY? /SETTING UP BUISNESS IN THE GERMAN MARKET 
Johannes Dimas, Germany Trade and Invest GmbH, Germany  
PO.6 
OFFSHORE WIND DUE DILIGENCE – EXPERIENCE OF ASSESSING RISKS ACROSS THE KEY EUROPEAN MARKETS 
Andrew Henderson, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
PO.7 
UTILITIES ACT AS OFFSHORE MARKET MAKERS 
Eduard Sala de Vedruna, Emerging Energy Research, Spain  
PO.8 
CONTRACTUAL CONCEPTS FOR THE REALISATION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS  
Achim Schreider, Lahmeyer International, Germany  
PO.9 
PROJECT FINANCE OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS: RISK ANALYSIS FOR A STRUCTURED FINANCE  
Achim Schreider, Lahmeyer International GmbH, Germany  
PO.10 
OFFSHORE WIND PROJECTS: ROLE AND INTEREST OF THE LENDER’S ENGINEERS FROM CONTRACT NEGOTIATION UNTIL OPERATIONAL PHASE 
Sébastien Moine, Mott MacDonald , United Kingdom  
PO.11 
NECESSITY OF THE CONSTRUCTION OF AN OFFSHORE BASIS PORT GERMAN BIGHT 
Nils Schnorrenberger, BIS Bremerhaven Economic Developement Company GmbH, Germany  
PO.12 
MUTAL RECOGNITION OF TRAINING 
Jesper Mortensen, Svitzer Safety Service, Denmark  
PO.14 
OFFSHORE CLUSTER MANAGEMENT IN SCHLESWIG HOLSTEIN – A NETWORK OF EXCELLENCE  
Martin Schmidt, Windcomm schleswig-holstein, Germany  
PO.15 
ONSHORE CONSTRUCTION YARD AND FACILITIES FOR PHASE 1 OF C-POWER’S FARSHORE WIND FARM ON THE THORNTON BANK 
Nathalie Gunst, Technum-Tractebel Engineering NV, Belgium  
PO.16 
200MW HONG KONG OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Joseph Hussey, Wind Prospect Ltd, United Kingdom  
PO.17 
TOWARDS A REGULATORY FRAMEWORK FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN EUROPE 
Emmanuel De Corte, Tilburg University, The Netherlands  
PO.19 
THE EUROPEAN OFFSHORE SUPERGRID: OPPORTUNITY AND CHALLENGE 
Patrick Smart, Senergy Econnect, United Kingdom  
PO.20 
HEALTH AND SAFETY CONCEPTS FOR GERMAN OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Gundula Fischer, Germanischer Lloyd, Germany  
PO.22 
DELIVERY AND INSTALLATION OF INFIELD SUBMARINE POWER CABLES FOR THE FIRST GERMAN OFF-SHORE-WIND FARM „ALPHA VENTUS“ 
Mark Chanine, NSW - Norddeutsche Seekabelwerke GmbH , Germany  
PO.24 
POTENTIAL COST SAVINGS FOR SUBMARINE HV AND MV CABLE SUPPLY AND INSTALLATION 
Olivier Angoulevant, Nexans Norway AS, Norway  
PO.25 
OFFSHORE WIND POWER CABLE INSTALLATION: FIVE LESSONS LEARNED 
Joel Whitman, Global Marine Systems Limited, United Kingdom  
PO.26 
FROM EXISTING UNITS TO DEDICATED UNITS FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM INSTALLATION 
Gerrit Schepman, GustoMSC, The Netherlands  
PO.27 
DANISH OFFSHORE PROVES 30% CHEAPER THAN UK 
Per Volund, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.28 
SUPERVISION, OFFSHORE FOUNDATIONS AT RODSAND 2 
Soren Sorensen, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.29 
BREAKING THE SAND WAVES FOR BRITNED, A CORRIDOR DESIGN THROUGH MOBILE SEABEDS 
Wino Snip, Primo Marine, The Netherlands  
PO.30 
THE NEED OF OFFSHORE METOCEAN AND SEABED SURVEY CAMPAIGNS FOR FAR SHORE WIND FARMS 
Piet Haerens, IMDC, Belgium  
PO.31 
PREPARING THE CONSTRUCTION OF A 1000 MW OFFSHORE WIND FARM IN GERMANY - INNOGY NORDSEE 1 
Johannes Rosen, RWE Innogy GmbH, Germany  
PO.32 
A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE SAFE AND EFFICIENT PERFORMANCE OF SITE INVESTIGATION FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS  
Rolf Balthes, Fugro Consult GmbH, Germany  
PO.33 
SUPPORT TOOL FOR MANAGING THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN OFFSHORE WIND FARM  
Nico Stolk, Ecofys, The Netherlands  
PO.34 
OPTIMZATION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS – EXPERIENCE AND THEORY – 
Rajai Aghabi Rivas, Ecofys, The Netherlands  
PO.35 
RODSAND 2. LAYOUT OPTIMIZATION. 
Jan Svenson, Grontmij Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.36 
MARINE DATA MANAGEMENT, A KEY TOOL TO DELIVERING OFFSHORE PROJECTS 
Dominic Stratton, The SeaRoc Group, United Kingdom  
PO.37 
MARINE MANAGEMENT AND CO-ORDINATION: LESSONS LEARNED, TOOLS AND FUTURE REQUIREMENTS 
Peter Hodgetts, The SeaRoc Group, United Kingdom  
PO.38 
POWER CLUSTER - TURNING CONTACTS TO CONTRACTS 
Cheryl Paget, Suffolk County Council, United Kingdom  
PO.39 
SWORDCTSPACE’S SAAS BUSINESS COLLABORATION SOLUTIONS: INNOVATIVE TOOLS CONTRIBUTING TO EFFICIENT PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION 
Gert-Jan De Kieviet, Sword CTSpace, United Kingdom  
PO.40 
UNIVERSAL FOUNDATION CONCEPT - A SCM APPROACH TO INDUSTIALIZATION. 
Søren A. Nielsen, MBD Offshore Power A/S, Denmark  
PO.42 
CONTINUING STUDIES PROGRAMME IN OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY 
Moses Kaern, ForWind - Center for Wind Energy Research, Germany  
PO.44 
DEVELOPING THE HUMAN CAPITAL FOR OFFSHORE RENEWABLES 
Steve Clarke, Mainstream Renewable Power, United Kingdom  
PO.45 
THE WEATHER CHALLENGE FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS - BEST PRACTICE, EXPERIENCES AND NEW TECHNIQUES  
Kim Bentzen, Storm Weather Center AS, Denmark  
PO.46 
INTEGRATION OF OFFSHORE WIND WITH MODERN HVDC TECHNOLOGY 
Raphael Görner, ABB AG, Germany  
PO.47 
THE POTENTIAL FOR INTEGRATING WIND POWER WITH OFFSHORE OIL AND GAS PLATFORMS 
Wei He, StatoilHydro, Norway  
PO.48 
DYNAMIC NETWORK BEHAVIOUR OF OFFSHORE WINDPARKS 
Thomas Ahndorf, Technische Universität München, Germany  
PO.49 
ELECTRICAL PLANNING AND INTERCONNECTION OF LARGE OFFSHORE WIND FARM IN TAEAN KOREA 
Jens Larsen, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.50 
HVDC LIGHT CABLES FOR LONG DISTANCE GRID CONNECTION 
Kenneth Johannesson, ABB, Sweden  
PO.52 
CONCEPTUAL ELECTRICAL DESIGN FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS  
Swiatek Simon, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
PO.53 
THE COASTS OF IRAN 
Amir Gandomkar, Islamic Azad University - Najafabad Branch, Iran, Islamic Republic of  
PO.54 
ROBUST CONTROL OF WIND GENERATOR WITH FLEXIBLE TRANSMISSION 
Bachir Batoun, Applied Research Unit on Renewable Energies, Algeria  
PO.55 
THE INFLUENCE OF OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY ON PRICING AT THE INTRA-DAY SPOT MARKET IN GERMANY  
Michael Splett, University of Paderborn, Germany  
PO.56 
ENERGY ECONOMICAL BENEFITS OF OFFSHORE-SPECIFIC WIND POWER FORECASTING AND UTILIZATION OF INTRADAY TRADING  
Ümit Cali, EnBW Renewables GmbH, Germany  
PO.58 
OFFSHOREGRID: OBJECTIVES, APPROACH AND FIRST RESULTS 
Jan De Decker, 3E, Belgium  
PO.59 
COMPOSITE FIRE AND BLAST PROTECTION FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM SUBSTATIONS.  
Huw Radley, Solent Composite Systems Ltd, United Kingdom  
PO.60 
COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT OFFSHORE WIND FARM AC COLLECTION GRID TOPOLOGIES  
Ambra Sannino, ABB, Sweden  
PO.61 
SMOOTHING EFFECTS OF THE NATURAL COMBINATION POTENTIAL AT SPACIOUS DISTRIBUTED OFFSHORE WIND FARMS TO REDUCE THE INPUT VARIABILITY 
Michael Splett, University of Paderborn, Germany  
PO.62 
REDUCTION OF CO2 EMISSION OF CONVENTIONAL UTILITIES USING OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY – POSSIBILITIES AND PROSPECTS  
Michael Splett, University of Paderborn, Germany  
PO.63 
WIND POWER FORECASTING AT SMHI 
Ulf Andræ, SMHI, Sweden  
PO.65 
COMBINING MV LABORATORY AND SIMULATION RESOURCES TO INVESTIGATE FAST TRANSIENT PHENOMENA IN WIND CABLE SYSTEMS 
Ambra Sannino, ABB, Sweden  
PO.69 
MODEL TESTS OF A HORIZONTAL AXIS WIND TURBINE IN YAWED CONDITION 
Muyiwa S. Adaramola, Norwegian University of Sience and Technology, Norway  
PO.70 
OFFSHORE~WMEP – MONITORING OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY USE 
Stefan Faulstich, ISET e.V., Germany  
PO.71 
VPONE – A NEW FEM BASED SERVO HYDRO- AND AEROELASTIC CODE FOR WIND TURBINES 
Martin O.L Hansen, DTU, Denmark  
PO.72 
COST-EFFECTIVE MANUFACTURE OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE FOUNDATIONS 
Chris Punshon, TWI Ltd, United Kingdom  
PO.73 
DEEP WATER OFFSHORE WIND RESEARCH PROGRAM AND DEMONSTRATION FACILITIES 
Hakim Mouslim, Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France  
PO.74 
IMPROVING THE COST OF OFFSHORE WIND TECHNOLOGY: THERE IS HOPE 
Alun Roberts, BVG Associates, United Kingdom  
PO.75 
NORWEGIAN CENTRE FOR OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY - OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH ACTIVITIES IN NORCOWE AND RECENT MODELLING RESULTS FOR THE MARINE BOUNDARY LAYER  
Jens Andreas Melheim, CMR Gexcon, Norway  
PO.76 
FLOW: LEARNING BY DOING IN THE NETHERLANDS 
Jan Van der Tempel, TU Delft/Ampelmann, The Netherlands  
PO.77 
NEARSHORELAB, FULL SCALE TEST AND DEMONSTARTION COMPLEX. 
Søren A. Nielsen, NearshoreLAB A/S, Denmark  
PO.79 
DYNAMIC SAFETY OF WINDTURBINES FOR LOADS REDUCTION AND FATIGUE LIFE PERFORMANCE TROUGH AUTOMATED SIMULATION CAPTURING BEST DESIGN PRACTICES IN A SINGLE CAE ENVIRONMENT 
Guillaume Lethe, LMS Intl, Belgium  
PO.81 
INNOVATIVE NON-DESTRUCTIVE INSPECTION ON OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES 
Morgan Troedsson, FORCE Technology, Denmark  
PO.82 
TELEMONITORING OF WIND TURBINES - FOR YOUR CONDITION BASED MAINTENANCE 
Dr. Edwin Becker, Prüftechnik Condition Monitoring AG, Germany  
PO.83 
STAINLESS STEEL FOR WIND TOWER DESIGN 
Uwe Rasch, URS Corporation, Germany  
PO.84 
DYNAMIC MOTION ANALYSIS OF CATENARY MOORED SPAR WIND TURBINE IN EXTREME ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITION  
Madjid Karimirad, CeSOS/NTNU, Norway  
PO.85 
A NEW FLOATING CONCEPT - SEALOCK- FOR OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE 
Jostein Berland, Vest Kran Wind Power AS, Norway  
PO.87 
THE PERFECT RECIPE FOR AN OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE 
Erwin Coolen, OutSmart, The Netherlands  
PO.88 
INTELLIGENT WIND POWER UNIT APPLICABLE TO OFFSHORE WIND FARM (PERFORMANCES AND ACOUSTIC NOISE OF TANDEM WIND ROTORS)  
Koichi Kubo, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan  
PO.89 
DYNAMIC RESPONSE OF FLOATING OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE SYSTEM WITH A HEAVE PLATE 
Takeshi Ishihara, The University of Tokyo, Japan  
PO.91 
A COMPARISON OF TWO CONCEPTS FOR FLOATING WIND TURBINES 
Tor Anders Nygaard, UMB, Norway  
PO.92 
THE MONOPOD BUCKET FOUNDATION - RECENT EXPERIENCE AND CHALLENGES AHEAD  
Christian LeBlanc, DONG Energy, Denmark  
PO.93 
ESTER TRANSFORMER FLUIDS – A TOTAL SOLUTION TO WINDPARK TRANSFORMER TECHNOLOGY 
James O'Brien, M&I Materials, United Kingdom  
PO.94 
FAULT CURRENT LIMITATION ON OFFSHORE WIND FARM ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS 
Scott Ware, G & W Electric, United States of America  
PO.95 
CONTROL METHODS FOR REDUCING PLATFORM PITCHING MOTION OF FLOATING WIND TURBINES 
Hazim Namik, The University of Auckland, New Zealand  
PO.96 
APPLYING ROTORCRAFT DESIGN KNOWLEDGE TO PROPEL THE WIND BLADE INDUSTRY 
Alain Floutier, Dassault Systemes, France  
PO.98 
WAKE EFFECTS ON TURBINE LOADING 
Laust Olsen, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
PO.99 
CORROSION AND LOW TEMPERATURE TESTS ON LIQUID-FILLED TRANSFORMERS FOR OFF-SHORE APPLICATIONS 
Raymond Van Schevensteen, Pauwels Trafo Belgium, Belgium  
PO.100 
SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE EVALUATION OF TURBINE DESIGNS FOR OFFSHORE 
Katherine Dykes, MIT, United States of America  
PO.101 
MODEL DEVELOPMENT AND LOADS ANALYSIS OF A WIND TURBINE ON A FLOATING OFFSHORE TENSION LEG PLATFORM 
Denis Matha, University of Stuttgart, Germany  
PO.102 
STUDY OF VIABILITY OF IMPLANTATION OF OFFSHORE WIND PARKS IN ECONOMIC SEA TERRITORIES OF CANARY ISLANDS 
Isidro Padron, La Laguna University, Spain  
PO.103 
DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS FOR A WIND-POWERED SEAWATER PUMP 
Niels Diepeveen, TU Delft, The Netherlands  
PO.104 
UPWIND DEEP WATER SUPPORT STRUCTURE CONCEPT COMPARISON STUDY 
Wybren De Vries, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands  
PO.105 
AN ANALYSIS OF MULTIVARIABLE PITCH CONTROL STRATEGIES FOR FLOATING OFFSHORE TURBINES 
Patrick Rainey, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
PO.108 
OFFSHORE WIND SECTOR AND WIND ENERGY POTENTIAL IN GREECE 
Konstantinos Garakis, TEI Athens - Energy Technology Dept. - RES Lab, Greece  
PO.110 
VERIFICATION OF A WIND ATLAS FOR THE NORTH SEA, BALTIC SEA, AND BRITISH COASTAL AREAS 
Heinz-Theo Mengelkamp, Anemos Gesellschaft fuer Umweltmeteorologie mbH, Germany  
PO.111 
SEA BED PREPARATION ROBOT 
Knud Winther Hansen, E. Pihl & Son a/s, Denmark  
PO.112 
LIDAR SCANNING OF MOMENTUM FLUX IN THE MARINE BOUNDARY LAYER 
Alfredo Peña, Risø DTU, Denmark  
PO.113 
PRE-DEPLOYMENT VALIDATION OF VARIOUS WIND LIDAR REMOTE SENSING DEVICES AND SUCCESSIVE OFFSHORE DEPLOYMENTS ON OIL AND GAS RIGS IN THE NORTH SEA FOR A 2 YEAR OFFSHORE WIND MEASUREMENT CAMPAIGN 
Detlef Kindler, WINDTEST K.-W.-Koog GmbH, Germany  
PO.114 
EU-NORSEWIND - DELIVERING OFFSHORE WIND SPEED DATA 
Andy Oldroyd, Oldbaum Services, United Kingdom  
PO.115 
USE OF REGIONAL REANALYSIS OVER EUROPE (WINDTRENDS) AS REFERENCE DATA FOR LONG-TERM ADJUSTMENTS 
Jose Vidal, Meteosim Truewind, Spain  
PO.116 
AUTONOMOUS SODAR CONFIGURATIONS – OFFSHORE AND ONSHORE 
Guenter Warmbier, GWU-Umwelttechnik GmbH, Germany  
PO.117 
WIND FARM DESIGN - WHEN OTHER WIND FARMS ARE CLOSE 
Arno J Brand, ECN, The Netherlands  
PO.118 
DATA AND ITS USES FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARM SITE SELECTION 
Goodall Carol, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
PO.119 
ACD MODELLING OF WAKE INTERACTION IN HORNS REV WIND FARM 
Stefan Ivanell, Gotland University, Sweden  
PO.120 
COMPARING ON- AND OFF-SHORE AERODYNAMIC TURBULENCE BY MEASUREMENT 
Daniela Schwab, University of Applied Sciences Kiel, Germany  
PO.121 
REMOTE SENSING DATA UTILIZATION FOR OFFSHORE WIND RESOURCE ASSESSMENT 
Seokwoo Kim, Korea Institute of Energy Research, Korea, Republic of  
PO.123 
ENERGY DYNAMICS OF AN INFINITELY LARGE OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Sten Frandsen, Risø DTU, Denmark  
PO.124 
EU-NORSEWIND – INVESTIGATION OF FLOW DISTORTION EFFECTS ON OFFSHORE INSTRUMENTATION 
Matt Stickland, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom  
PO.125 
A 4D-VAR WIND ASSIMILATION SCHEME TESTED IN AN OFFSHORE CASE STUDY - THE BERLENGAS ISLAND 
Paulo Costa, INETI / LNEG, Portugal  
PO.126 
IMPROVEMENTS IN OFFSHORE AEP CALCULATIONS 
Paul Van Lieshout, Sinclair Knight Merz, United Kingdom  
PO.127 
SYSTEMATIC WIND FARM MEASUREMENT DATA FILTERING TOOL FOR WAKE MODEL CALIBRATION.  
Sten T. Frandsen, Risø DTU, Denmark  
PO.129 
A NOVEL SAMPLING METHOD FOR SATELLITE-BASED OFFSHORE WIND RESOURCE ESTIMATION 
Merete Badger, Risø DTU, Denmark  
PO.130 
COMPARISON OF ENVISAT/ASAR-ESTIMATED OFFSHORE WIND RESOURCE MAPS AROUND SHIRAHAMA WITH THOSE FROM MESOSCALE MODELS MM5 AND WRF 
Katsutoshi Kozai, Kobe University, Japan  
PO.131 
OPTIMUM OFFSHORE WIND FARMS SIZE FOR THE ITALIAN SCENARIO 
Lorenzo Battisti, University of Trento , Italy  
PO.132 
NEXT GENERATION LIDAR FOR OFFSHORE APPLICATIONS 
Peter Clive, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
PO.133 
STABILITY INFLUENCE ON WINDPOTENTIAL IN AN OFFSHORE WINDPARK 
Mikael Magnusson, SMHI, Sweden  
PO.134 
A GIS BASED SURVEY FOR SITING OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN MASSACHUSETTS 
James Manwell, Wind Energy Center, United States of America  
PO.135 
ERROR FACTORS IN SAR WIND RETRIEVAL FOR INSHORE AREAS 
Yuko Takeyama, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan  
PO.136 
INVESTIGATION OF CAUSES OF INACCURATE WIND SPEEDS IN WRF SIMULATION FOR AN OFFSHORE SITE IN JAPAN 
Susumu Shimada, Kobe University, Japan  
PO.137 
OFFSHORE WIND POWER PRODUCTION AND THE SEA BREEZE CIRCULATION 
Matthew Filippelli, AWS Truewind, United States of America  
PO.138 
HIGH-RESOLUTION WIND DATA FROM DYNAMICAL DOWNSCALING: AN IMPORTANT ASSET IN OFFSHORE WIND RESEARCH 
Michel d. S. Mesquita, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Norway  
PO.139 
OFFSHORE ASSESSMENT COMBINING SCATTEROMETER RETRIEVALS AND NUMERICAL WEATHER PREDICTION MODELING 
Jim McCaa, 3TIER, United States of America  
PO.140 
WIND SPEED, SHEAR AND TURBULENCE AT FINO1 COMPARED TO A NEW WRF-SCHEME AND DIFFERENT MICRO-SCALE MODELS 
Jens Tambke, ForWind - Center for Wind Energy Research, Germany  
PO.141 
A STUDY ON EFFECTIVE USAGE OF MESOSCALE MODEL FOR ACCURATE OFFSHORE WIND SIMULATION 
Teruo Ohsawa, Kobe University, Japan  
PO.142 
WAVE FORCES ON OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES WITH VARYING CROSS SECTION AND EXPOSED TO ASYMMETRICAL AND BREAKING WAVES 
Helge Gravesen, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.143 
REFERENCE WIND SPEED ANOMALY OVER THE DUTCH PART OF THE NORTH SEA 
Arno J Brand, ECN, The Netherlands  
PO.144 
IMPLEMENTATION OF A SUPERELEMENT APPROACH IN A DESIGN TOOL FOR OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES WITH ARBITRARY SUPPORT STRUCTURES 
Fabian Vorpahl, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy and Energy System Technology (IWES), Germany  
PO.145 
AN ASSESSMENT OF THE EXTERNAL CONDITION FOR OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY USING A MESOSCALE SIMULATION AND A TYPHOON SIMULATION 
Atsushi Yamaguchi, The University of Tokyo, Japan  
PO.146 
OFFSHORE TRANSFORMER PLATFORM DESIGN FOR SAFETY 
Thomas Boehme, Det Norske Veritas, United Kingdom  
PO.147 
SIMULATION METHOD FOR JOINT FLEXIBILITY IN MODERN OFFSHORE SUPPORT STRUCTURES 
Holger Huhn, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy and Energy System Technology (IWES), Germany  
PO.148 
DESIGN TOOLS FOR FLOATING WIND TURBINES 
Ivar Fylling, MARINTEK, Norway  
PO.149 
SITE ASSESMENT - DESIGN BASIS AND LOAD PROCESS  
Agnete Olesen, GMCB, Denmark  
PO.152 
INTEGRAL OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE DESIGN AND ANALYSIS IN THE FREQUENCY DOMAIN 
Feike Savenije, ECN, The Netherlands  
PO.154 
OFFSHORE WIND MILLS AND COATINGS: THE PERFECT MATCH 
Sergio Armada, Sintef, Norway  
PO.155 
LARGE-EDDY SIMULATIONS (LES) FOR FAR-WAKE EFFECT MODELLING OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS  
Jens Tambke, ForWind - Center for Wind Energy Research , Germany  
PO.156 
HULL PRELIMINARY FOUNDATION DESIGN 
Per Vølund, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.157 
NONLINEAR BUCKLING ANALYSIS OF SLENDER HYBRID CONNECTIONS IN OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY CONVERTERS 
Stephan Lochte-Holtgreven, ForWind - Center for Wind Energy Research, Germany  
PO.158 
SCOUR PROTECTION PERFORMANCE OF AN INNOVATIVE COMPOSITE RUBBER MAT 
Bastiaan Huisman, Deltares, The Netherlands  
PO.159 
STUDY ON THE DYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE SUBSTRUCTURE 
Kang-Su Lee, Korean Register, Korea, Republic of  
PO.160 
REVISITING MONOPILE DESIGN USING P-Y CURVES - RESULTS FROM FULL SCALE MEASUREMENTS ON HORNS REV 
Tue Hald, DONG Energy, Denmark  
PO.162 
OPTIMIZATION POTENTIAL FOR MONOPILE SUPPORT STRUCTURES USING OFFSHORE-SPECIFIC WIND TURBINE CONTROLS  
Tim Fischer, Universität Stuttgart, Germany  
PO.163 
A GEOTECHNICAL RELIABILITY BASED METHOD FOR OFFSHORE SUPPORT STRUCTURE AND SITE DESIGN 
James Manwell, University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States of America  
PO.164 
DETERMINING THE EMBEDDED PILE LENGTH FOR LARGE DIAMETER MONOPILES 
Victor Krolis, Fugro Engineers B.V., The Netherlands  
PO.165 
EMBODIED ENERGY AS A METRIC FOR ASSESSING FOUNDATION TYPES 
Danny Bonnett, RES, United Kingdom  
PO.166 
SUBSTATION INSTALLATION IN OFFSHORE WIND PARKS 
Anders Thomsen, ISC Consulting Engineers A/S, Denmark  
PO.167 
AN INVESTIGATION INTO WIND AND WAVE LOADING ON A 2MW AND 5MW OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE 
Louise Devaney, University of Manchester, United Kingdom  
PO.168 
TEST OF FATIGUE LOAD ESTIMATION METHOD FOR OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES 
Dick Veldkamp, Vestas Central Europe, The Netherlands  
PO.169 
WINDFLOAT: A FLOATING FOUNDATION FOR LARGE OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE 
Alla Weinstein, Principle Power Inc., United States of America  
PO.172 
APPLICATION OF CPT BASED PILE DESIGN METHODS FOR OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE FOUNDATIONS 
Neil Morgan, Cathie Associates, Belgium  
PO.173 
BRAVING THE ELEMENTS: WIND, WAVES AND ASSET MANAGEMENT WITHIN THE OFFSHORE WIND INDUSTRY. 
Kevin Black, Partrac Ltd, United Kingdom  
PO.174 
CAN PILE DRIVING MONITORING REPLACE A GEOTECHNICAL BOREHOLE ? 
Martin Hammann, Cathie Associates, France  
PO.175 
TRI- AND QUADROPODS: A SOFT SOIL FOUNDATION CONCEPT 
Jorgen Norlev, Grontmij | Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.177 
GRAVITY TRIPOD 
Christian Riis Petersen, ISC A/S Consulting Engineers, Denmark  
PO.178 
KRIEGERS FLAK - OPTIMISED GEOTECHNICAL INVESTIGATION  
Thomas Beth, Grontmij Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.179 
DESIGN AND EXPERIMENTAL TESTING OF NEW SCOUR PREVENTION DEVICES FOR OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE MONOPILE FOUNDATIONS* (*) AWARDED FIRST PLACE IN THE DANISH TALENT FACTORY ASSOCIATION’S CREATIVE OFFSHORE CHALLENGE ’08 STUDENT COMPETITION 
Jose Simon, Denmark Technical University, Denmark  
PO.180 
STIFFNESS FORMULATION OF FLEXIBLE BUCKET FOUNDATION 
Lars Bo Ibsen, Aalborg University, Denmark  
PO.181 
OBS – PERFECT OFFSHORE WIND TURBINES INSTALLED ON SHORE  
Richard Scheiner, Ocean Bricks System Ltd (OBS), Israel  
PO.182 
FIRST 5 MW TURBINES OFF SHORE WIND PARK AT THORNTON BANK  
Peter Libert, Sarens nv, Belgium  
PO.185 
A NEW APPROACH TO ASSESSING WEATHER RISK DURING INSTALLATION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS  
Tue Hald, A1 Consult, Denmark  
PO.186 
INSTALLING TRANSITION PIECES FROM A MOVING SHIP 
Jan Van der Tempel, TU Delft/Ampelmann, The Netherlands  
PO.187 
BCMS BOLT CONDITION MONITORING SYSTEM / HARSH ENVIRONMENT TRANSDUCER PASSES TOUGHEST SALT SPRAY TEST 
Frank Scheuch, Intellifast GmbH, Germany  
PO.188 
REPLACEMENT OF TRANSFORMERS ON MIDDELGRUNDEN OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Jens Larsen, Grontmij Carl Bro, Denmark  
PO.190 
BENEFITS OF OFFSHORE PERFORMANCE MONITORING 
Peter Clive, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
PO.191 
FLIGHT LEADER CONCEPT FOR WIND FARM LOAD COUNTING: OFFSHORE EVALUATION 
Tom Obdam, ECN, The Netherlands  
PO.192 
VIRTUAL SENSORS FOR MONITORING OFFSHORE TURBINES  
Andrew Kusiak, University of Iowa, United States of America  
PO.193 
RIWEA - ROBOT TO INSPECT ROTOR BLADES OF WIND ENERGY CONVERTERS 
Tilo Förster, Fraunhofer IFF, Germany  
PO.194 
SMART MAINTENANCE.  
Jacco Witteveen, OutSmart, The Netherlands  
PO.195 
OPTIMIZATION OF THE MAINTENANCE, A NECESSITY FOR THE FUTURE?  
Peter Jacobsson, Systecon AB, Sweden  
PO.196 
SOFT COMPUTING APPLICATIONS IN WIND POWER SYSTEMS: A REVIEW AND ANALYSIS 
Ahmad Alzghoul, School of Technology and design, Sweden  
PO.197 
A MODEL FOR ASSESSING THE OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE COST OF WIND FARMS IN COLD CLIMATE ENVIRONMENT: ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE CASE STUDIES 
Idriss El-Thalji, School of Technology and design, Sweden  
PO.198 
MODELING AND SIMULATION OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS FOR FARM LEVEL CONTROL 
Mohsen Soltani, Aalborg University, Denmark  
PO.199 
MAXIMIZING CUSTOMER VALUE THROUGH LONG TERM PARTNERSHIPS 
Thomas Kyvsgaard, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
PO.200 
SUBSEA MONITORING IMPROVEMENTS - AFFORDABLE GIS & LIVE WEB MONITORING 
Arron Burrows, Offshore Marine Management, United Kingdom  
PO.202 
ACCESS TO KEY O&M DATA BY USE OF IEC 61400-25 
Anders Johnsson, Vattenfall Research and Development AB, Sweden  
PO.203 
HOW HULL DESIGN IMPACTS THE PERFORMANCE OF WIND FARM SUPPORT AND MAINTENANCE VESSELS. 
Mark Willbourn, BMT Nigel Gee, United Kingdom  
PO.204 
DEVELOPMENT OF AN OPTIMZATION TOOL FOR ELECTRICAL NETWORKS AND O&M STRATEGIES FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS 
Juan Amate López, Iberdrola Ingeniería y Construcción, Spain  
PO.205 
IMPROVED RELIABILITY BY CONDITION BASED MAINTENANCE  
Tomas Årman , SPM Instrument AB, Sweden  
PO.206 
ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF SERIAL DEFECTS ON THE PERFORMANCE OF OFFSHORE WIND PROJECTS 
Daniel Bacon, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
PO.207 
MOMAC OFFSHORE ACCESS SYSTEME "MOTS" AND "SLILAD" 
Stefan Leske, Momac GmbH und Co. KG, Germany  
PO.208 
AMPELMANN ON SEA-AXE: SAFE, EASY, FAST ACCESS 
Jan Van der Tempel, TU Delft/Ampelmann, The Netherlands  
PO.210 
AMPELMANN: THE NEW OFFSHORE ACCESS SYSTEM 
David Cerda Salzmann, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands  
PO.211 
LEFT TO CHANCE? A MONTE CARLO TOOL FOR OPTIMIZING OFFSHORE O&M 
Peter Stuart, RES, United Kingdom  
PO.212 
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN REMOTE LOCATION AND HARSH ENVIRONMENTS 
Stewart French, Ode, United Kingdom  
PO.213 
SYNERGIES BETWEEN WIND, WAVE AND TIDAL POWER FOR UK ROUND 3 
Sander Adam, Siemens Wind Power A/S, Denmark  
PO.214 
HYBRID POWER SYSTEM USING OFFSHORE-WIND TURBINE AND TIDAL-TURBINE WITH FLYWHEEL (OTTF) 
Mohammad Lutfur Rahman, Kyoto University, Japan  
PO.215 
OCEAN ENERGY – OFFSHORE WIND IN A BIGGER PICTURE 
Bob Meijer, Evelop Netherlands bv, The Netherlands  
PO.216 
ASSESSING OFFSHORE WIND FARM SITES ALONG THE COAST OF CHINA 
Richard Boddington, SgurrEnergy, United Kingdom  
PO.217 
WHAT IS A MATURE EUROPEAN OFF SHORE WIND POLICY ? 
Ton Sledsens, Stichting Natuur en Milieu, The Netherlands  
PO.218 
POWER CLUSTER – FIRST RESULTS FROM AN EU-PROJECT WORKING IN THE NORTHERN EUROPEAN COMPETENCE NETWORK FOR OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY 
Mathias Grabs, BIS Bremerhaven Economic Developement Company GmbH, Germany  
PO.219 
PITCH ACTUATOR DESIGN REQUIREMENTS AND MODELING  
Yoonsu Nam, Kangwon National University, Korea, Republic of  
PO.220 
A STUDY ON THE VIBRATION CHARACTERISTICS OF OFFSHORE WIND TURBINE TOWER INCLUDING SEABED SOIL-STRUCTURE INTERACTION 
Lee Jung Tak, INHA University, Korea, Republic of  
PO.221 
MAKING BLUE ENERGY GREEN; MANAGING ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES OF OFFSHORE WIND POWER  
Dan Wilhelmsson, For IUCN , Sweden  
PO.223 
HVIDOVRE OFFSHORE WIND FARM 
Hans Chr. Soerensen, SPOK, Denmark  
PO.225 
MULTI CRITERIA WEBGIS TOOL TO BRING OFFSHORE WIND POWER TO THE PEOPLE 
Dirk Lübsen, ICBM/Terramare, Universität Oldenburg, Germany  
PO.226 
THE EFFECT OF WIND POWER INSTALLATIONS ON COASTAL TOURISM 
Jeremy Firestone, University of Delaware, United States of America  
PO.227 
WINCH PULLEY SYSTEM FOR WIND TURBINE MAINTENANCE 
HyunYong Park, Doosan Heavy Industries, Korea, Republic of  
PO.228 
FASCINATION OFFSHORE - A PUBLIC ACCEPTANCE INITIATIVE FOR OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY  
Andreas Wagner, Stiftung Offshore Windenergie, Germany  
PO.229 
LICENSING OFFSHORE WIND FARM IN GREECE 
Konstantinos Garakis, TEI Athens - Energy Technology Dept. - RES Lab, Greece  
PO.230 
PLANNING RULES AND REGULATION FOR OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN GREECE 
Konstantinos Garakis, TEI Athens - Energy Technology Dept. - RES Lab, Greece  
PO.231 
FACILITATING WITHIN A FRAMEWORK: CONSIDERING THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF OFFSHORE WIND FARMS. 
Fabrice Cassin, CGR Legal, France  
PO.232 
INVESTMENT IN OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY IN POLAND – GLOBAL STANDARDS VERSUS LOCAL REQUIREMENTS  
Radoslaw Skowron, KKPW Law Office, Poland  
PO.235 
REGULATORY AND MARKET REVIEW OF OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY ACROSS EUROPE  
Andrew Henderson, Garrad Hassan, United Kingdom  
PO.236