Offshore Structures (Britain)

54°35′41″N 1°15′02″W / 54.594785°N 1.250453°W / 54.594785; -1.250453 (TAG Energy Solutions / Offshore Structures (Britain) Ltd.)

Offshore Structures (Britain) Ltd.
Company typeJoint venture
IndustryRenewable Energy
PredecessorHaverton Hill shipyard
Founded2014; 11 years ago (2014)
FounderBladt Industries and EEW Group
Defunct2020 (2020)
FateClosed
Headquarters,
Area served
North Sea
ProductsFoundations
OwnerBladt Industries and EEW Group
Number of employees
100 (2014)
Websiteoffshorestructures.uk

Offshore Structures (Britain) was a British marine offshore structure foundation manufacturing company that was based at Haverton Hill near Billingham on the north bank of the River Tees. The company was formed as a joint venture between Danish company Bladt Industries and German company EEW Group when it took over the assets of the factory that had been established by TAG Energy Solutions.

It was building structures for offshore wind farms while it was operating. The site has been empty since 2021.

The factory was previously used briefly in the late 2000s by Tees Alliance Group for a prematurely terminated contract to manufacture oil rig substructures. The works was based on the site of the Haverton Hill shipyard, initially operating as the Furness Shipbuilding Co. Ltd., established 1918. Shipbuilding at the yard ended in 1979.

History

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Haverton Hill built HMS Erne (U03) in 1943

The Haverton Hill shipyard opened in 1917 under a wartime construction programme. Shipbuilding took place at the yard from 1919 to 1969 as the Furness Shipbuilding Company under the shipping group Furness Withy. In 1968 the yard was acquired by Swan Hunter who operated the yard for a further decade, and finally by Smith's Dock Co. Ltd who built three ships at the yard in 1978. Shipbuilding ceased in 1979.[1][2]

In 2008 the shipyard reopened under Tees Alliance Group (TAG) to construct the foundation structure of an oil rig 'SeaDragon 1', initially to be leased to Pemex (Mexico). In 2009 the contract between TAG and the rig development company (Sea Dragon Offshore) was terminated, with the financier (Lloyds TSB) citing financial risk, and the work transferred to a yard in Singapore with previous experience of rig construction.[3]

 
Wind turbine transition pieces at the yard (2014)

TAG Energy Solutions was established in 2010.[4] The company invested in a new 40 by 171 metres (131 by 561 ft) production facility with machines for production of large diameter steel tubes suitable for monopoles, jacket foundations and other offshore structures.[5] In 2013 the company was awarded a contract for monopoles and transition pieces for the Humber Gateway wind farm.[6]

In September 2014 the company was reported entered insolvency with the loss of around 100 jobs,[7] having run up a £61 million debt.[8]

In late 2014 Bladt Industries (Denmark) and EEW (Germany) acquired the assets of Tees Alliance Group Corporate, and formed a joint venture Offshore Structures (Britain) Limited to reuse the TAG Energy facility at Billigham.[9][10] An initial contract was obtained in Jan 2015 for transition pieces for the Burbo Bank Extension offshore wind farm.[11]

As of mid 2021 the Yard is stripped empty, just a security presence.

References

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  1. ^ Sources:
    • "FURNESS SHIPBUILDING COMPANY LTD. HAVERTON HILL", www.teesbuiltships.co.uk, Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust, retrieved 16 February 2016
    • "SWAN HUNTER SHIPBUILDERS Ltd. HAVERTON HILL", www.teesbuiltships.co.uk, Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust, retrieved 16 February 2016
    • "SMITH'S DOCK Co. Ltd. HAVERTON HILL", www.teesbuiltships.co.uk, Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust, retrieved 16 February 2016
  2. ^ "Furness Shipbuilding Co", www.gracesguide.co.uk, retrieved 16 February 2016
  3. ^ Sources:
  4. ^ TAG ENERGY SOLUTIONS LIMITED – Company number 07379608, Companies House, retrieved 16 February 2016
  5. ^ "TAG Energy Solutions – Tubular Production Facility Teesside", www.reidsteel.com, 5 October 2011
  6. ^ "E.ON awards wind farm foundations contract to TAG Energy Solutions", www.renewableenergymagazine.com, 27 February 2013
  7. ^ Price, Kelley (16 October 2014), "TAG Energy Solutions: Up to 100 job losses as wind farm firm collapses", www.gazettelive.co.uk
  8. ^ Keighley, Tom (30 December 2014), Creditors of TAG Energy Solutions face £61m shortfall, archived from the original on 21 March 2019, retrieved 16 February 2016
  9. ^ "New offshore engineering venture planned on former TAG Energy Solutions site on the River Tees", www.thejournal.co.uk, 21 November 2014, archived from the original on 21 March 2019, retrieved 16 February 2016
  10. ^ Hugill, Steven (25 March 2015), "Turbine firm powering ahead on Teesside", The Northern Echo
  11. ^ "DONG Energy awards foundations contract and secures production in the UK", www.dongenergy.co.uk, 27 January 2015
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