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Wind Catching Systems

Contacts

Wind Catching Systems AS
Strandveien 50
1366 Lysaker, Norway

Tel: +47 905 35 024

Description

Wind Catching Systems was founded in 2017 by Asbjørn Nes, Arthur Kordt and Ole Heggheim with an ambition to radically improve offshore wind technology. The goal was to build a system that was competitive enough to operate without subsidies.

To overcome this challenge, the entrepreneurs began by asking a seemingly simple question: was the basic design used in offshore wind production today the right one? Was a technology based on that of old Dutch corn mills truly the most efficient method for offshore wind power production? The current technology had performed well on land and bottom fixed offshore developments, but did this entail that it was necessarily the best system on a floater?

The three founders suspected that this was not the case and decided to explore the possibility of producing floating offshore wind using an entirely new concept, putting their combined technical and industrial experiences to work. Nes led the technical design with, while Heggheim and Kordt contributed with his experience from project execution in the maritime and yard industry.

Inspired by Kai Levander, Heggheim's former colleague at Aker Yards, they started working on the idea of multi-turbines. The goal was to maximize power generation from a concentrated area. It soon became clear that a multitude of small turbines gave a much better result per area than a big turbine. Easy maintenance, durability and simplicity were the guiding principles when the first Windcatcher was designed as a sail on a trimaran.

One of the defining features of the Windcatcher is the fact that it bypasses the cubic law valid for a single turbine - weight and cost scales with the radius^3 while energy production scales with radius^2. The scaling potential for the Windcatching Technology is phenomenal. This is just the beginning.

Once the initial design was completed in 2017, the team brought the design to Aibel, a leading supplier in the European offshore wind segment, and IFE (Institute for Energy Technology) to further develop the technology. In this phase, they worked closely with Roy Stenbro, Head of Wind Energy at IFE, and Jan Wigaard, Manager Concept & Studies Offshore Wind at Aibel. Through their work, Wind Catching Systems was able to create a roadmap to de-risk and qualify the design.

In 2020, Ferd and North Energy came in as the company’s first external investors. Together with the support from Innovation Norway, Wind Catching Systems now has a solid financial foundation to further develop the technology and build a company that can truly have a transformational impact on the offshore wind industry.

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