00:00Our plant in Sardinia, called Mistral, is a project planned in the north-west area of the Sardinian Sea Front.
00:17It is a plant that we have been developing for about three years, two and a half years.
00:25It is a plant that has been developed considering all the best practices that can be used for the development of the plant.
00:40It is clear that this plant is a plant developed at a distance of at least 31 km from the coast,
00:48so it is absolutely not visible, and at a distance of at least 37 km from touristic points.
01:00The simulations indicate that the landscape part is absolutely not important,
01:07the impact point is absolutely very low.
01:11An offshore wind farm is a plant that has a very relative impact on the ground,
01:24in the sense that we are only talking about dugouts and power substations,
01:31which are the ones that are necessary for the connection to the national power grid.
01:36So we are talking about plants that make sure that the energy needed for the Italian state,
01:45in this case we are talking about Sardinia, but we are always talking about the Italian state,
01:49is produced in international waters, because the plant is planned to cover more than 12,000 km,
01:58with a duct that reaches the ground.
02:01Naturally, this is the best way to produce energy, we are talking about plants with a capacity of 500 MW,
02:08at least in this case, then there are others with a capacity of 1,000 MW,
02:11depending on the size of the project, and therefore without occupation on the ground.
02:20This is very important in a territory like Sardinia,
02:24where we have problems today, especially with the Aridone issue, the new decree.
02:31This will be the way to help Sardinia fill the gap of the burden sharing,
02:40and make sure that there is no impact that Sardinia does not want,
02:48but that will give it the opportunity to obtain the necessary results and requests from the central government.
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