Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Offshore wind supply chain worth $109B, report says

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — A group studying the economics of offshore wind energy in the U.S. says building and operating the nascent industry will be worth $109 billion to businesses in its supply chain over the next 10 years.

The report by the Special Initiative on Offshore Wind comes as states on both coasts and the Gulf of Mexico are moving to enter or expand their role in the industry, and are making crucial decisions on what to spend and where to spend it.

Multiple states, including New Jersey, want to become the hub of the supply chain that will support offshore wind energy in the U.S., planning and building onshore support sites for manufactur­ing turbine blades and other components of wind power.

The group, affiliated with the University of Delaware, estimated the market at $70 billion two years ago.

One caveat: the report notes that most of the initial components to be used for U.S. offshore wind projects will come from Europe. It does not predict when or where a shift might occur.

The U.S. has set a goal of generating 30 gigawatts of power from offshore wind by 2030 — enough to power over 10 million homes.

Spending is already happening.

On Friday, Orsted and Eversource signed an $86 million supply chain contract with Riggs Distler & Company, Inc. to build foundation components for wind turbines for New York’s Sunrise Wind project off Montauk Point on Long Island that will be able to power 600,000 homes.

In August, those two companies also signed a deal with Kiewit Offshore Services for the first American-built

offshore wind substation, which will be a part of the same Long Island project. The substation will be constructe­d near Corpus Christi, Texas.

“These investment­s have been a vision for a long time, but they are becoming a reality today,” said Tory Mazzola, an Orsted spokesman.

New Jersey has often said it wants to be the east coast hub for offshore wind, and is building onshore manufactur­ing and assembly facilities it hopes will be used by many projects.

“We believe the offshore wind industry is going to bring billions of dollars into New Jersey,” said Joseph Fiordaliso, president of the state Board of Public Utilities.

The expenditur­es forecast in the report include nearly $44 billion on 2,057 offshore wind turbines and towers; $17 billion on 2,110 offshore turbine and substation foundation­s; nearly $13 billion on nearly 5,000 miles of cables; $10.3 billion on 53 on-and-offshore substation­s; as well as other constructi­on and operationa­l costs.

It also projects the amount of power states will generate from offshore wind by 2030. New York is

forecast to have 9,314 megawatts; New Jersey to have 7,558; Massachuse­tts to have 5,604; Virginia to have 5,200; Connecticu­t to have 2,108; Maryland to have 1,568; and Rhode Island to have 1,000.

Currently, 8,000 megawatts worth of power are under contract in those states.

“Collective­ly, these state commitment­s are equivalent to the electrical capacity of 32 large nuclear power plants, an extraordin­ary (capital expenditur­e) that requires many suppliers,” the report read.

The initiative describes itself as an independen­t project at the University of Delaware’s College of Earth, Ocean and Environmen­t that supports the advancemen­t of offshore wind. It receives funding from organizati­ons including the Rockefelle­r Brothers Fund.

Offshore wind energy is viewed as a way to combat climate change by providing the globe with cleaner energy. At a forum in Atlantic City last week on offshore wind, New Jersey’s environmen­tal protection commission­er said the industry will come with adverse impacts as well as benefits.

 ?? TED SHAFFREY/AP ?? Wind turbines generate electrical power in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The state wants to be the hub of the supply chain that supports offshore wind energy.
TED SHAFFREY/AP Wind turbines generate electrical power in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The state wants to be the hub of the supply chain that supports offshore wind energy.

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