WORLD
Use our resources to better understand the debate about offshore wind farms.

Photograph courtesy London Array Limited
Discussion Ideas
- Read the BBC article, then read through our activity “Stakeholder Debate: Wind Energy.” Adapt the activity’s analysis for the London Array debate.
- Who are the stakeholders in the debate about the slowed expansion of the London Array?
- London Array Limited, a consortium of three energy companies: DONG Energy (a Danish company), E.ON UK Renewables (a British company) and Masdar (an Emirati company based in Abu Dhabi)
- Manufacturers. These include Siemens Wind Power (the Danish company which supplied the turbines), Aarsleff (another Danish company that constructed the turbines’ piling and foundations), Future Energy (a Norwegian-Belgian venture that designed and constructed the onshore electrical substation), and Nexus and JDR Cable Systems (French and British companies which supplied the cables from the array to the substation).
- Consumers. The London Array supplies electricity to homes, schools, businesses, and hospitals in Kent, a county in southeast England with a population of almost 2 million. The wind farm also supplies parts of Greater London, an administrative area that includes the city of London and its suburbs.
- Government. According to another article, the “UK is the world leader in offshore wind, but that is partly because few other countries have shown an interest in the technology, which is more expensive than onshore wind turbines.”
- Global Environment. Wind energy reduces greenhouse gas emissions, which contribute to climate change. “Climate change is the biggest long term threat to wildlife and we need an urgent transition from fossil fuels to low carbon renewable energy. Wind power is a vital part of our renewable energy mix,” according to a spokesman for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, the UK’s largest conservation organization.
- Local Environment. The project is unable to guarantee the protection of the area’s red-throated divers (more commonly known as red-throated loons in North America). Red-throated divers are not endangered, but the Thames estuary is home to about 6,500—about a third of the birds’ population in the UK.
- Who are the stakeholders in the debate about the slowed expansion of the London Array?
- Do you think the Thames estuary is a good site for an expanded wind farm? Consider the implications for the stakeholders above, as well as the basic benefits and challenges posed by wind power itself, outlined in this encyclopedic entry.