Times Standard (Eureka)

Sale jumpstarts offshore wind in US

- By Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, ORE. >> Tuesday marks the first-ever U.S. auction of leases to develop commercial-scale floating wind farms, in the deep waters off the West Coast.

The live, online auction for the five leases — three off California’s central coast and two off its northern coast — has attracted strong interest and 43 companies from around the world are approved to bid. The wind turbines will float roughly 25 miles offshore.

The growth of offshore wind comes as climate change intensifie­s and need for clean energy grows. It also is getting cheaper. The cost of developing offshore wind has dropped 60% since 2010 according to a July report by the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency. It declined 13% in 2021 alone.

Offshore wind is well establishe­d in the U.K. and some other countries but is just beginning to ramp up off America’s coasts, and this is the nation’s first foray into floating wind turbines. Auctions so far have been for those anchored to the seafloor.

Europe has some floating offshore wind — a project in the North Sea has been operating since 2017 — but the potential for the technology is huge in areas of strong wind off America’s coasts, said Josh Kaplowitz, vice president of offshore wind at the American Clean Power Associatio­n.

“We know that this works. We know that this can provide a huge slice of our our electricit­y needs, and if we’re going to solve the climate crisis we need to put as many clean electrons online as we can, particular­ly given increases in load demand with electric vehicles,” he said. “We can reach our greenhouse gas goals only with offshore wind as part of the puzzle.”

Similar auctions are in the works off Oregon’s coast next year and in the Gulf of Maine in 2024. President Joe Biden set a goal of deploying 30 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030 using traditiona­l technology that secures wind turbines to the ocean floor, enough to power 10 million homes. Then the administra­tion announced plans in September to develop floating platforms that could vastly expand offshore wind in the United States.

Minimum bids for the leases range from $6 million to $8 million, but sales could go higher. An auction earlier this year for traditiona­l offshore wind leases off the coasts of New York and New Jersey netted more than $4 billion, the record for the U.S. so far.

The nation’s first offshore wind farm opened off the coast of Rhode Island in late 2016, allowing residents of small Block Island to shut off five diesel generators. Wind advocates took notice, but with five turbines, it’s not commercial scale.

The sale is designed to promote a domestic supply chain and create union jobs. Bidders can convert part of their bids into credits that benefit those affected by the wind developmen­t — local communitie­s, tribes and commercial fishermen.

As envisioned, the turbines — possibly nearly as tall as the Eiffel Tower — will float on giant triangular platforms roughly the size of a small city block with cables anchoring them underwater. They’ll each have three blades longer than the distance from home plate to the outfield on a baseball diamond, and will need to be assembled onshore and towed, upright, to their open-ocean destinatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States