bbc.com

States considers leasing seafloor for wind farm

Jack Silver

BBC News, Guernsey

![](/bbcx/grey-placeholder.png)![Reuters Eight offshore wind turbines in a line at sea.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/b2bd/live/04721420-0590-11f0-9541-3d90994a77b1.jpg.webp)Reuters

The States could lease part of Guernsey's seafloor to a developer to build an offshore wind farm

Guernsey could lease part of its seafloor to a wind farm developer, the States has said.

Policy and Resources (P&R) said an offshore wind farm could be worth £1.3bn over 35 years, so it wanted to spend £1.3m over the next two years developing a framework to allow it to lease the seafloor and share profits.

P&R said its figures were based on leasing a 157 sq km (61 sq miles) site, with the potential to generate 1.27 gigawatts (GW).

Deputy Bob Murray, from the the offshore wind sub-committee, said the proposal might not be "the answer to our financial challenges" as there were lots of assumptions, but initial research suggested there could be "substantial value in leasing a section of seabed".

P&R said: "A developer, not the States, would meet much of the significant future cost of developing an offshore wind farm."

Any revenue from a future windfarm would be shared between the developer and the States, it said, subject to "commercial negotiations".

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