In This Issue
- Flanigan’s EcoLogic: The American Offshore Wind Race
- Oil Rigs to Reefs!
- General Electric Gas Plant Closure
- Lightyear One’s 450 Miles of Range
- Solar Booming in Florida!
- Dubai’s 900 MW Solar Tender
- Solar Brew Pubs Celebrated
- New York City Declares Climate Emergency
- The TWA Hotel at JFK
- Japan’s Virtual Power Plant
- EcoMotion Update: Residential Solar Workshop in Carson
Flanigan’s EcoLogic: The American Offshore Wind Race
RenewableUK reports that the global offshore wind market grew by 16% over the last 12 months. It’s all about bigger and better technology. Wind turbines being employed on new projects generate three times the power of turbines just five years ago.
Globally, offshore wind in operation, under construction, or in development rose from 105,000 MW to 121,000 MW. China has 12,000 MW in the pipeline; Taiwan 8,900 MW. In the North Sea off the United Kingdom, the world’s biggest offshore wind farm just came on line. Located 75 miles offshore, its turbines anchored to the sea floor, Hornsea One has a generating capacity of 1,200 MW, pushing the U.K.’s offshore wind generating capacity to 8,200 MW, the largest in Europe.
While the United States has only 30 MW of offshore wind installed, the United States now accounts for nearly half of the rapid global growth reported by RenewableUK. The U.S. has wind farms planned in Massachusetts (with a goal of 1,600 MW), Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, and Maryland. There’s a race being run between these states given wind potential to develop 20,000 MW of offshore wind on the East Coast by 2030, representing a $70 billion business opportunity according to research at the University of Delaware.
In April, Massachusetts approved its first offshore contracts for 800 MW; New York is concurrently working to procure 800 MW or more. On July 1st the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) issued a draft Request for Proposals to procure up to 2,000 MW of offshore wind capacity to begin delivery no later than 2026.
The largest offshore wind procurement in the U.S. just took place in New Jersey. The Garden State selected Denmark’s Orsted A/S to develop a 1,100 MW wind project off the coast of Atlantic City. The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) reviewed a number of proposals including one presented by Equinor from Norway and a joint venture between EDF Renewables North America and Shell New Energies. The BPU cited experience as a determining factor; Orsted bought offshore wind developer Deepwater Wind last year.
“New Jersey is going to be finally open for business as far as offshore wind is concerned,” said BPU President Joseph Fiordaliso. This project is the first step in the State’s commitment to contract for 3,500 MW of offshore wind by 2030. The project is called Ocean Wind, will create 15,000 jobs, and is expected to be completed in 2024.