Morgan Offshore was a proposed Round 4 offshore wind farm in the Irish Sea, planned at roughly 1,500 MW and sited about 37 km from the North West coast of England adjacent to the Isle of Man. Developed through a joint-venture SPV, the project was conceived to deliver large-scale renewable capacit...
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On 12 March 2026, the Secretary of State issued a letter to interested parties for the Morgan and Morecambe Offshore Wind Farms Transmission Assets project, requesting information and inviting comments as part of a decision-stage consultation on the DCO application, with responses due by 23:59 on 13 April 2026.
EnBW and JERA Nex bp announced they have decided not to proceed with the Agreement for Lease for the 1.5 GW Morgan offshore wind project, following failure to secure a CfD in the UK AR7 allocation round and adverse market conditions. The neighbouring Morecambe generation project continues under new sole owner Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP), but the joint Morgan and Morecambe Transmission Assets DCO — designed to serve both wind farms with up to 6 export cables (4 Morgan + 2 Morecambe) — is now oversized. The TA DCO decision remains pending. The Crown Estate is working with the developers to assess implications and will update the market on next steps for the Morgan seabed lease.
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EN020028, EN020032, Morgan Offshore, Morgan Offshore Wind Farm, Morgan Offshore Wind Project, Morgan Generation Offshore Wind Farm, Morgan Generation Assets, Morgan Offshore Wind Limited, Morgan Offshore Wind Project: Generation Assets
In January 2026, following EnBW’s decision to withdraw after Morgan and Mona failed to secure a Contract for Difference in Allocation Round 7, JERA Nex bp and EnBW decided not to proceed with the 1.5 GW Morgan offshore wind project or its Agreement for Lease, and The Crown Estate began working with the developers on handing back the Morgan site and reviewing future options.
On 15 January 2026, EnBW announced it was withdrawing from the Morgan and Mona projects after the joint venture failed to secure Contracts for Difference (CfDs) in the UK’s seventh allocation round, meaning Morgan did not obtain the anticipated CfD revenue support.
The Fugro Synergy geotechnical campaign at the Morgan and Mona offshore wind sites was estimated to be completed by 10 September 2025, concluding the planned offshore borehole, sampling and coring works across the array areas.
On 29 August 2025, the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero granted development consent for the 1.5 GW Morgan Offshore Wind Project Generation Assets, with the Morgan Offshore Wind Project Generation Assets Order 2025 made on the same date and coming into force on 22 September 2025, legally authorising construction and operation of the offshore wind farm in the Irish Sea.
By 31 July 2025, bp and JERA Nex Limited had agreed to provide a US$5.8 billion equity commitment for offshore wind investments across various jurisdictions, explicitly including the Mona and Morgan Offshore Wind Projects, by contributing interests in their offshore wind businesses into the JERA Nex bp joint venture.
Fugro was contracted to undertake an additional offshore geotechnical survey at the Morgan and Mona offshore wind sites using the vessel Fugro Synergy, with works planned to start on or around 2 June 2025 and involve drilling, sampling and coring boreholes throughout the array areas.
According to a Notice to Mariners referenced in May 2025, a geotechnical survey within the Morgan and Mona array sites, to be carried out by Gardline’s vessel Horizon Geodrill, was scheduled to start in March 2025 and involve borehole drilling and coring across the lease areas.
In 2024, Morgan Offshore Wind Limited and Morecambe Offshore Windfarm Limited submitted a Development Consent Order (DCO) application for the Morgan and Morecambe Offshore Wind Farms: Transmission Assets, an electric lines project comprising offshore and onshore transmission infrastructure connecting the Morgan and Morecambe generation assets to the National Grid.
On 24 April 2024, Morgan Offshore Wind Limited submitted an application for a Development Consent Order for the Morgan Offshore Wind Project Generation Assets to the Planning Inspectorate, seeking consent under the Planning Act 2008 for a 1,500 MW offshore wind farm of up to 96 turbines in the Irish Sea.
In September 2023, Morgan Offshore Wind Limited circulated an electronic newsletter to prescribed consultees under section 42 and selected key stakeholders for the Morgan Generation Assets, providing project updates and directing them to further information online as part of pre-application consultation ahead of a wider public announcement.
Kent was awarded a Front-End Engineering Design (FEED) contract by bp and EnBW for the Morgan Offshore Wind Project: Generation Assets (together with the Mona project), covering FEED and an option for detailed design of jacket foundations for 17–24 MW wind turbines in approximately 35 m water depth in the Irish Sea. The six‑month FEED programme will develop foundation designs, support foundation selection, demonstrate technical feasibility, and provide a robust basis for managing project risk and engaging fabrication and transport-and-installation contractors ahead of later project phases.
An Agreement for Lease for the Morgan offshore wind project area was entered into between Morgan Offshore Wind Limited and The Crown Estate as part of Offshore Wind Leasing Round 4, formally securing seabed rights for the Morgan Agreement for Lease Area used as the initial project boundary for assessment and consultation.
In 2022, the joint venture developing the Morgan offshore wind project received an electricity generation licence for the project, alongside a licence for the adjacent 1.5 GW Mona offshore wind farm, enabling them to generate electricity from these Round 4 sites in the Irish Sea.
The 2022 offshore geotechnical investigation campaign awarded to Fugro for the Morgan and Mona offshore wind farms was planned to run through to September 2022, by which time the borehole drilling, sampling and testing across the array areas were expected to be completed to inform foundation design.
In July 2022, the UK Government’s Pathway to 2030 Holistic Network Design (HND) scoped the Morgan Offshore Wind Project in as a Pathway to 2030 project and concluded, through system-wide network planning, that Morgan and the Morecambe Offshore Windfarm should work collaboratively to connect to the National Grid at Penwortham in Lancashire.
BP and EnBW awarded Fugro a geotechnical site investigation contract for the Morgan and Mona offshore wind farms, with offshore geotechnical fieldwork at the array sites planned to start in May 2022 using vessels including Fugro Synergy.
In the 2021 UK Round 4 offshore wind leasing exercise, the 3 GW Mona and Morgan complex was acquired for a record high option fee of over £231 million per 1.5 GW plot, committing the developers to pay substantial annual option fees for Morgan’s seabed rights.
Morgan Offshore Wind Limited (Morgan OWL), a joint venture between bp Alternative Energy Investments Ltd. and Energie Baden-Württemberg AG (EnBW), is identified as the developer of the Morgan Offshore Wind Project and acts as a co-applicant for the Morgan and Morecambe Offshore Wind Farms: Transmission Assets, which provide the shared export and grid connection infrastructure to National Grid’s Penwortham substation.
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