The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

US offshore wind takes

- ANDREW DYKES

After a decade of languishin­g in the doldrums, the US offshore wind industry is picking up steam as it races to meet new installati­on targets set by the Biden administra­tion.

While its onshore sector has boomed to nearly 155GW, as of April 2022 the US has just 42MW of operationa­l offshore capacity, according to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).

So far, much has been driven by individual states. As of last year, eight east coast states had set their own plans to procure as much as 37GW of capacity to help them reach local renewables and emissions goals.

However, a new federal target set by President Biden last year would see the country reach 30GW of offshore wind by 2030, driving more than $12 billion per year in capital investment – and the race to get there is now on.

There is no shortage of potential. As of the end of last year, the US had around 1GW of fully approved projects with offtake and connection agreements, and a further 11GW with site control and offtake. Another 24GW-worth of projects can be realised from leased and unleased sites already in progress, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).

The most recent and largest of these so far, New York Bight, was held in February and saw the auction of six areas off New Jersey totalling nearly 2,000 square km. 25 companies were prequalifi­ed, including the likes of Equinor, SSE

Renewables and Ørsted – the latter through a subsidiary with a different name.

Ultimately, six companies submitted winning bids, for which they paid a total of nearly $4.4 billion.

As was seen in the recent ScotWind offshore lease auction, these sales are no longer the sole domain of utilities and clean energy pure-plays, and the field is increasing­ly dominated by energy supermajor­s such as Shell and TotalEnerg­ies.

Both submitted winning bids as part of joint ventures in New York Bight – the former as part of EDF Renewables­owned Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind Bight, which won the third most expensive site for $780m, while TotalEnerg­ies joined forces with Germany’s EnBW to secure the second most expensive site, for $795m.

The largest area, which could host up to 3GW of capacity, was won by RWE Renewables and National Grid, for around $1.1bn, while the smallest was secured by Mid-Atlantic Offshore Wind, owned by a fund managed by Copenhagen Infrastruc­ture Partners (CIP).

CI IV is the latest of CIP’s flagship funds and reached final close in April of 2021 after raising 7 billion euros. Notably, it is also one of the only successful Bight bidders that is not an integrated energy company or developer.

It is the third US offshore project secured by the Danish infrastruc­ture investors, alongside its joint venture with Iberdrola to build Vineyard Wind 1 off Massachuse­tts – the country’s first commercial-scale scheme – as well as a lease secured in the New England Wind Developmen­t Area.

All told, it offers CI IV the potential to develop at least 3.5GW of capacity on the east coast, positionin­g it as a major player in the budding industry.

Much has been made of the Bight auction as a vital step to the reaching the country’s 30 GW target. However, Rystad Energy says it expects “most of the capacity” awarded in the auction to become fully operationa­l post-2030.

“While permitting processes have been accelerate­d in the last year alongside the domestic supply chain starting to take shape, several hurdles remain for the winning companies,” the energy analyst said in a Bight-focused briefing note.

“Offtake agreements are likely needed through solicitati­on rounds in the different US east coast states and developmen­t consent must be granted by BOEM (Bureau of Ocean Energy Management) with a 2-3year constructi­on period then needed before an offshore wind farm can be fully commission­ed.”

As progress picks up on offshore projects up and down the coast, investment plans are also beginning to emerge for vessels and onshore supply chains.

Constructi­on began last year on the nation’s

While permitting processes have been accelerate­d ... several hurdles remain for the winning companies

first major piece of port infrastruc­ture, dubbed the New Jersey Wind Port, on the Delaware River, which would see the creation of a heavy-lift wharf for jack-up vessels and a 30-acre marshallin­g area for component assembly and staging.

Meanwhile, in March, Equinor and BP announced their plans to develop the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal (SBMT) complex in Brooklyn, New York into a major regional hub for offshore wind constructi­on.

Equinor secured rights to the 816MW Empire Wind 1 off New York in a 2017 auction, later forming a developmen­t partnershi­p with BP when it farmed into the project in 2020. Earlier this year, the partnershi­p secured further leases for Empire Wind 2 and Beacon Wind, giving the two a total pipeline of over 3.3GW off the state.

They committed to invest up to $250 million to turn the Brooklyn terminal into a “worldclass” offshore wind port capable of staging and assembling components for use at the offshore projects and the wider US east coast offshore industry. It will also serve as a base for operations and maintenanc­e once they are online.

A new fleet of wind installati­on vessels (WIVs) are also on their way, as the offshore drive requires

US-built vessels to meet Jones Act regulation­s – placing an additional bottleneck on an already tight market.

The country’s first such vessel, the $500m Charybdis, has been commission­ed by Dominion Energy for its Revolution Wind, Sunrise Wind and Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) projects along the east coast.

Currently under constructi­on at Keppel AmFELS’ yard in Texas, the 144m ship is expected to be sea-ready by late 2023.

Another Jones-act compliant vessel had been proposed by operator Eneti, though plans were scrapped in February,

while an as-yet-unnamed vessel commission­ed by Maersk Supply Service is being built in Singapore by SembCorp Marine, with a view to being operationa­l at Empire and Beacon Wind by the mid2020s. Crucially, however, this will rely on US-built tugs and barges to ferry the components from shore.

Other hurdles remain. Projects already in developmen­t have faced opposition from local environmen­tal and fisheries groups, and lawsuits could potentiall­y derail even those developmen­ts which have offtake agreements in place.

Meanwhile, the Biden administra­tion has so

far been unable to pass what remains of its proposed Build Back Better Act and its $555 billion in provisions for climate and clean energy investment, which would be of considerab­le help to the still nascent offshore sector.

However, a strong pipeline of projects is now on the way, and the government anticipate­s up to six more potential lease sales by 2025, including the offshore Carolinas and California later this year, followed by rounds covering the central Atlantic, Gulf of Maine, the Gulf of Mexico, and offshore Oregon.

The jury is still out on whether Mr Biden’s headline target may be

met. A February briefing from Wood Mackenzie said that up to 34GW capacity could be in place by the end of the decade, owing to renewed support from Washington.

Rystad Energy is more bearish, noting that: “Although leasing activity has ramped up under the Biden administra­tion, with six more auctions planned between 2022 to 2024, the supply chain constraint­s, mainly due to the Jones Act requiremen­ts, will hamper project developmen­ts and impede the 30GW by 2030 federal target.

“Our estimates show the US will end this decade with an offshore wind capacity close to 22 GW.”

 ?? ?? DREAM BIG: New York and the surroundin­g area has become the focus of a drive to meet new federal offshore wind targets.
DREAM BIG: New York and the surroundin­g area has become the focus of a drive to meet new federal offshore wind targets.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? BP and Equinor are planning to develop the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal complex.
BP and Equinor are planning to develop the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal complex.
 ?? ?? An artist’s rendering of the $500m Charybdis wind installati­on vessel.
An artist’s rendering of the $500m Charybdis wind installati­on vessel.

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