MPI Offshore, an offshore installation service firm owned by Van Oord, last week accidentally dropped three wind turbine blades into the sea, while conducting scheduled maintenance at Vattenfall's Ormonde wind farm in the Irish Sea, off the UK.

Jack-up Vessel Drops Turbine Blades Overboard at Vattenfall's Ormonde Offshore Wind Farm
Caption: Offshore Support Vessel MPI Adventure - Image courtesy of Rob Wixpix

According to the Kingfisher incident report, MPI Offshore's MPI Adventure jack-up vessel last week jacked up alongside Ormonde B01 wind turbine and dropped three 61 m turbine blades weighing 126 tonnes in total, and a blade clamping tool weighing 3000-3100kg overboard.

A notice to mariners dated October 18 said that the dropped items were in the water adjacent to MPI Adventure near the wind turbine generator B01, and that debris - glass fiber fragments and part of the blade - had fractured off from one blade, with a potential to reach the shore.

At the time of the report, MPI Adventure was still on site, and arrangements were being made for the deployment of marker buoys.

A Vattenfall spokesperson on Friday confirmed for Offshore Engineer that there had been an incident at the wind farm during planned maintenance:

“An incident during planned maintenance at Ormonde Offshore Wind Farm resulted in components falling into the sea. No one was injured, but we alerted the relevant authorities immediately and we have launched a full investigation. In addition to determining what happened, our attention is focused on ensuring that any debris in the sea or washing up onshore is cleaned up as quickly as possible."

Offshore Engineer understands that the other turbines continue operating as normal, but that the MPI Adventure is still on site, waiting for a survey to be completed before it can move off.

The Ormonde offshore wind farm is located in the Irish Sea, 10 kilometers off Barrow-In-Furness. The wind farm was fully commissioned in early 2012. The wind farm is made up of 30 Repower wind turbines with a total capacity of 150 MW. The turbines, 5MW each, cover an area of 8.7 km2.

A video showing the Ormonde incident: