GE’s huge wind turbines to power ‘world’s biggest offshore wind farm’ | TheHill – The Hill

American manufacturing company General Electric (GE) will supply new wind turbines for a 1.2 gigawatt portion of the Dogger Bank Wind Farm, the worlds largest offshore wind farm that will help make renewable energy options accessible.

Located in the northeast coast of the U.K., the Dogger Bank Wind Farm is a joint venture between companies SSE Renewables and Equinor, and is expected to be finished by 2026. GE will install their turbines in 2025.

The turbine model GE will be supplying to Dogger Bank will be the Haliade-X, and the order will consist of a total of 190 units.

Worlds largest offshore wind farm to use giant 14MW turbines! Equinors & SSEs Dogger Bank is worlds largest offshore wind farm! Its being built in three phases off Englands northeast coast! #windpower #RenewableEnergy #Sustainabilityhttps://t.co/URu6Qw9utC

Dogger Bank C will use a 14 MW version of the Haliade-X, the most powerful offshore wind turbine in operation today, John Lavelle, the President & CEO of Offshore Wind at GEs Renewable Energy branch, said in a press release. In doing so, this unique project will both continue to build on the UK's leadership in offshore wind and serve as a showcase for innovative technology that is helping to provide more clean, renewable energy.

GEs Haliade-X reports a capacity factor or the ratio of actual energy produced over the maximum possible output of 60 to 64 percent, a reported five to seven points above the industry standard.

Using power from a single turbine can save roughly 52,000 metric tons of carbon emissions, the equivalent of emissions generated by 11,000 vehicles annually.

The Dogger Bank will be capable of powering up to6 million homes by the time of completion.

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Why Offshore Wind and Energy Giants Are Chasing Off-Grid Green Hydrogen – Greentech Media News

The European Union wants to build 40 gigawatts of green hydrogen electrolyzers by 2030and estimates that 80 to120 gigawatts of solar and wind will be needed to power them.

Thats a new headache for Europes grid operators. Decarbonization is expected to double the demand for electricity as transport and heat are also electrified.

Taking hydrogen production off the power grid could be a win-win solution to these problems. Thats the idea behind plans for what's termed "islanded" hydrogen, which would pair electrolyzers with offshore wind farms and send hydrogen molecules, rather than electrons, back to shore.

The AquaVentus consortium, led by German utility RWE, is exploring the deployment of up to 10 GW of islanded green hydrogen by 2035, with the island of Heligoland serving as a central hub. That makes it the largest green hydrogen proposal on the drawing board thus far. Other AquaVentus partners include Siemens Energy, Vattenfall, Vestas, Siemens Gamesa and Shell.

AquaVentus is significantly larger than the 4 GW plans in Saudi Arabia, although that project, in the new megacity Neom, is planned to be up and running in 2025.

Industrial applicationswill be a big source of demand for hydrogen, even more so in the early days of this transition. In Europe, that means clusters of demand in Belgium, Netherlands and Germany. Hydrogen piped back from AquaVentus would land downriver from the port of Hamburg.

The costs of transporting hydrogen from ocean platforms via pipeline may appear at first glance to be much greater than the costs of laying undersea transmission to carry electricity to shore. But that doesnt take into account the cost of offshore substations to collect wind farm power, or the severely congested state of the onshore power grid. A massive coordinated effort will be needed to whip those gridsinto shape to absorb the rapidly growing amount of offshore wind power being planned.

In light of those challenges, piping hydrogen back to demand centers may make sense, particularly for a North Sea region that already hosts an extensive undersea pipeline infrastructure and deep industry experience in building it. So far, however, the initial wave ofislanded hydrogen projects are starting small.

Earlier in December, Siemens Gamesa announced an islanded green hydrogen trial in Denmark that will start operations next month. An existing 3 MW turbine is connected to an alkaline electrolyzer, and hydrogen will be transferred to tankers for use in Everfuels hydrogen refueling stations. The Brande Hydrogen project 3 MW turbine will produce enough fuel for 50 to 70 taxis.

Once a wind farm can produce hydrogen independent of a grid, you can place the wind farm where you find the strongest winds on good sites without concerns for grid availability, Henrik Mortensen, senior business analystfor innovation and products at Siemens Gamesa, told GTM in an email.

With the EUs ambitions for green hydrogen production, it will be necessary to go to offshore wind. Here we see great potential in wind farms moving molecules to shore instead of electrons.

Another islanded hydrogen project in the U.K., dubbed Dolphyn, is proposing a 2 MW and 10 MW pilot for floating wind turbines with on-board electrolyzers. An analysis by ERM, the firm behind Dolphyn, showed the total lifetime costs of four different setups.

Two use floating turbines with electrolyzers, each using different floating foundations (single spar and semi-submersible). A third uses a central platform offshore for the hydrogen production, and the fourth simply runs the power back to onshore electrolyzers.

At all distances from the shore, 50, 100and 250 kilometers, a semi-submersible floating turbine with on-board electrolyzers was the cheapest. Beyond 100 kilometers, the costs of high-voltage cables back to shore start to create a gulf in cost.

The Dolphyn project has led to the concept of islanded hydrogen being considered in National Grids Future Energy Scenarios.

Rob Gibson is the whole system and gas supply manager for National Grid Electricity System Operator. He and his team developed the emission, hydrogen and gas inputs for the Future Energy Scenarios. They consider a number of potential outcomes for the energy system, with hydrogen an increasing area of focus.

Gibson describes the various envisioned outcomes as credible extremes. Its most ambitious, the "Leading The Way" scenario, sketches out a situation where the impending hydrogen economy uses all green hydrogen generated from renewable energy. Other scenarios rely more on blue hydrogen, or hydrogen made from fossil fuel feedstocks with the resulting carbon emissions captured and stored.

With the 10 GW proposal from RWE and partners now out in the open, Gibson considers the momentum for green hydrogen to be growing, even though he personally thinks a combination of blue and green is more likely.

It definitely adds a level of credibility around the potential for an all-green hydrogen future, and then skipping over, potentially, the blue one, Gibson said in an interview. As it stands, blue hydrogen is being presented by some as a transition fuel for green.

Of course, neither of these two technologies are proven at scale, making comparisons at this point a bit premature. Still, theres a view that we hear when engaging with the industry that by the time blue hydrogen is up and running, the cost of green hydrogen could be equal to it, Gibson said. If thats the case, why would you invest twice?

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Why Offshore Wind and Energy Giants Are Chasing Off-Grid Green Hydrogen - Greentech Media News

Study ‘to help Scots businesses win global offshore work’ – reNEWS

The Scottish Offshore Wind Energy Council (SOWEC) has commissioned a report to help Scots companies win business in the global offshore wind market.

The councils supply chain and clusters group is working with BVG Associates on the study to help businesses that want to win work do so by reviewing how contracts are awarded in other sectors.

BVG Associates has already begun fieldwork for the project and will be contacting businesses in the supply chain and beyond in the first few months of 2021.

Analysts will investigate best practice in offshore wind as well as the oil and gas, aerospace and automotive industries to provide a blueprint for supply chain companies to get involved in the sector.

SOWEC supply chain and clusters lead Stephen Thompson said: Recognising that pre-qualification, accreditation and contractual terms can be a significant barrier to entry and success for many companies, BVG Associates will look at best practice in other sectors and at how to achieve standardised processes, as well as how to increase opportunities for Scottish companies to succeed more widely.

The results of this work will enable SOWEC to drive forward changes to the supply chain process and give confidence to the industry and supply chain.

The report, which is expected to be delivered by March 2021, will also explore the opportunity for greater collaboration throughout the supply chain.

The study will also look at the wider UK and international markets for export opportunities.

Funding for the study was previously announced by Crown Estate Scotland in September.

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Study 'to help Scots businesses win global offshore work' - reNEWS

GE’s giant turbines will power final phase of the ‘world’s biggest offshore wind farm’ – CNBC

General Electric's renewable energy division has been chosen as the preferred turbine supplier for the third and final phase of an offshore wind farm that's set to be the largest on the planet.

According to an announcement from SSE Renewables on Friday, a 14 megawatt (MW) version of GE's huge Haliade-X turbine will be used at a British energy project called Dogger Bank C. The first two phases, Dogger Bank A and B, are to use a 13 MW version of the Haliade-X.

Dogger Bank C is a joint venture between Equinor and SSE Renewables. The turbine supply agreement, as well as the service and warranty agreements, are all set to be finalized in the first quarter of next year. The deals are subject to Dogger Bank C reaching financial close at the end of 2021. If all goes to plan, turbine installation for the third phase will start in 2025.

With 107-meter long blades and a height of 248 meters, the scale of the Haliade-X turbine is considerable.

In a statement, Halfdan Brustad, vice president for Dogger Bank at Equinor, said turbine innovation had "played a huge role in bringing down the cost of offshore wind."

"These world-leading turbines will help us deliver renewable electricity at the lowest cost possible for millions of people across the U.K.," Brustad added.

Situated in waters off the northeast coast of England, the Dogger Bank Wind Farm will have a total capacity of 3.6 gigawatts when completed.

Equinor and SSE have both described it as the "world's biggest offshore wind farm," and it will have the ability to power millions of homes in the U.K. annually.

Earlier this month, both Equinor and SSE sold 10% stakes in the first two phases of the project to Italian firm Eni. Upon completion of this deal, Equinor and SSE's shares of Dogger Bank A & B will still amount to 40% each.

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GE's giant turbines will power final phase of the 'world's biggest offshore wind farm' - CNBC

Iberdrola to acquire stake in offshore wind projects developer Sea Wind – Power Technology

Spanish electric utility company Iberdrola has signed an agreement to acquire a 50% stake in offshore wind development company Sea Wind, which has a seven-project pipeline.

These projects are in the early stage of development and have a potential capacity up to 7.3GW.

The deal is in line with Iberdrolas geographical diversification strategy in investment-friendly markets and also creates a Baltic hub together with offshore wind projects in Germany and Sweden.

Additionally, the transaction will also help the company to position itself in the initial stage of development of the countrys offshore wind market.

The alliance between Iberdrola and Sea Wind is also open to the incorporation of Polish partners in the future.

With this transaction, Iberdrola is also promoting the creation of an offshore wind hub in the Baltic Sea which would act as the epicentre of offshore services and local content for the companys projects in Germany, Poland and Sweden.

Poland is said to have outlined a strategy to decarbonise its energy mix and intends to install nearly 8GW of offshore wind capacity by 2030.

Earlier Iberdrola and Sea Wind worked together for the development of the Baltic Eagle project off the German coast.

With this alliance in Poland, Iberdrola has completed its tenth corporate transaction so far this year, despite the challenges posed by the pandemic.

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Financial details of the deal have not been disclosed.

In September this year, Iberdrola agreed to buy out Japans green energy supplier Acacia Renewables.

Macquaries Green Investment Group (GIG) agreed to sell the shares, but financial details were not disclosed by either company.

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Iberdrola to acquire stake in offshore wind projects developer Sea Wind - Power Technology

Edison Chouest Offshore to Install First Battery Pack on a Jones Act PSV – gcaptain.com

Louisiana-based Edison Chouest Offshore has announced plans to install a battery system on board one of its 312-foot platform supply vessels working for a major oil and gas company in the Gulf of Mexico.

ECO will work with U.S.-based Marine Technologies on the project, which includes options for additional vessels. This integrated solution between a marine propulsion and battery system will be the first of its kind to allow the PSV to work on one generator in the 500-meter zone, ECO said, referring to the 500-meter safety zone around offshore installations.

ECO this Fall announced plans to build and operate the first-ever Jones Act compliant Service Operations Vessel (SOV) for the U.S. offshore wind industry. The company said these projects, combined with its proprietary shore power systems, C-Power, are examples of its effort to help client achieve long-term emissions reductions.

In pursuit of our long-term vision for renewable energy development and reduced emissions, Edison Chouest Offshore strives to improve efficiency through technology and innovation. Receiving the first-ever contract for battery technology in the Jones Act market demonstrates the close relationship we maintain with our clients and their trust in working with Edison Chouest Offshore, said Dino Chouest, Executive Vice President of ECO.

Through these efforts, we can reduce our carbon footprint and protect the environment for future generations, while our technological innovations make our customers offshore operations more efficient and cost-effective, said Chouest.

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Edison Chouest Offshore to Install First Battery Pack on a Jones Act PSV - gcaptain.com

Rossi relishing new venture into offshore sailing – International Sailing Federation

In recent times, more and more sailors have decided to try their hand at offshore sailing - specifically, double handed offshore - and Claudia Rossi is no different.

And the challenge of an offshore adventure with one other sailor, as well as the addition of the Mixed Two Person Offshore Keelboat Event at Paris 2024, is what tempted Rossi into this new venture.

"It's the beginning for me with offshore sailing, but I already love it," she admitted.

"When you sail a long distance, you feel free.

"You are completely in contact with the sea, with the boat, and sometimes you have to sail alone when the other person is sleeping. It's an amazing feeling and an exciting experience.

"I think that if you want to sail offshore, you don't have to be just a good sailor, but you have to be a good skipper.

"When you're sailing double handed, it's really hard because you have to know so many things; you have to understand the weather, you have to know each role on board, and at the same time you have to be able to sleep in really bad conditions sometimes, so it's not easy.

"You should also know your co skipper very well, because the most important thing is teamwork.

"When I started offshore sailing, my first choice to sail with was Matteo because we've sailed together for a long time.

"We are very good friends; he really knows me, and he knows how to help me during a race.

"We really enjoy it together and I'm really happy to share this new challenge with him."

In spite of the COVID-19 pandemic affecting the 2020 calendar, Rossi and Mason have managed to gain some racing experience already. Their target, with Paris 2024 on the horizon, is to get better and better and continue to enjoy themselves along the way.

"Big Wool Sailing Team have done two races this year," explained Rossi.

"We started with the European Championship in Genoa - there were eight boats on the starting line, and it was a really high level and hard competition.

"The race was about 300 miles and we finished in 67 hours. It was really hard but at the same time we really enjoyed it. We improved a lot and we were fighting until the end.

"Since then, we have started to work on our point of weakness and fix our point of strength.

"The second race that we did was the Nastro Rosa Tour event in Venezia.

"It was completely different because the race was about 100 miles and there were just three boats on the starting line. We finished in second place, but it was for sure a competitive race.

"For a long time we were in first place, but at the end we made a mistake and we lost some distance, so we finished second.

"But it was a really good event and for sure we improved a lot of things.

"I think that the inclusion of double handed offshore in the next Olympic Games is very important for the progress of our sport.

"It's a big opportunity for many professional sailors with different ages and different backgrounds, so I'm sure it will be a very hard competition.

"The offshore event in Paris 2024 will be really involving for people at home, because they can interact with us by using Virtual Regatta, or they can just follow us by the tracking, so it will be fun for them.

"We just asked about this during the European Championship in Genoa, and everyone we spoke to was really happy about this service."

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Rossi relishing new venture into offshore sailing - International Sailing Federation

Heerema and Safeway Team Up Offshore Taiwan – Offshore WIND

Heerema Marine Contractors (HMC) has awarded the Dutch offshore transfer equipment specialist Safeway with a contract to supply a Safeway Seagull type motion compensated gangway system for installation on the CSV Normand Baltic.

This is Safeways first contract for HMC, and it is also the first time the Safeway Seagull system with 3D crane function will be deployed to transfer personnel and cargo during an offshore wind project in Taiwan.

We have already reached record transfer speeds for the safe and efficient transfer of people and cargo with this type of gangway, and we are excited to be partnering with Heerema for the very first time and for the opportunity to prove to them our high-quality service, said Wijnand van Aalst, CEO at Safeway.

Obviously we are honoured that Heerema has opted to make use of Safeway Seagulls unique features such as roll compensation, height adjustment, zero impact bumpering/hover mode and counterweight, ensuring unrivalled workability throughout the year.

Heeremas scope of work on the offshore wind project involves the transport and installation of 111 wind turbine foundations as well as the installation of two offshore substations. The installation work will be executed by Heeremas heavy lift vessel Aegir.

The project in question is rsteds 900 MW Greater Changhua 1 and 2a located some 35 to 50 kilometres offshore.

Changhua 1 and 2a offshore wind farms will feature Siemens Gamesa 8 MW turbines installed onjacket foundations.

The rental contract for the 28 metre-long walk-to-work Safeway Seagull gangway will commence during the first half of 2021 for an initial term of up to 168 days, with an option for a possible extension, Safeway said.

This will be Safeways first W2W-project offshore Taiwan.

Not only are we adding a new country to our portfolio, we are also gaining further access to the Asia Pacific region after successful jobs in Australia and Malaysia, Van Aalst said.

Walk to Work operations are becoming increasingly important in this region and with our Safeway Seagull gangway type we can ensure maximum efficiency of operations for our clients.

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Heerema and Safeway Team Up Offshore Taiwan - Offshore WIND

Scorpio Bulkers Takes $500M Writedown to Shift to Offshore Wind Sector – The Maritime Executive

Illustration courtesy Scorpio Bulkers

By The Maritime Executive 12-20-2020 07:00:00

NYSE-listed Scorpio Bulkers announced Sunday that its board has formally approved its plan to sell all of its remaining dry bulk fleet and exit the sector by the end of 2021. The remarkable move comes as Scorpio plans to invest in its first $250 million-plus wind turbine installation vessel (WTIV) from Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering.

Scorpio has been steadily selling off its Kamsarmax and Ultramax bulkers at a steady clip of one to two (or more) per week since late September. The final decision to exit the sector means that Scorpio will take a write-down of up to $500 million on the value of its current and recently-sold vessels, including about $50-70 million in transaction costs and financing charges. It is also ending its relationship with its ship managers, the related companies Scorpio Commercial Management and Scorpio Ship Management.

Scorpio will soon have a new name to match its new occupation, the company said. The board plans to introduce a resolution to change its name by January 8.

The reason for Scorpio's transition is market-driven, according to chairman and CEO Emanuele Lauro. The EU plans to spend$1 trillion on offshore wind - primarily for transmission infrastructure -in order to achieve 300 gigawatts ofcapacity by 2050. The UK wants to install offshore wind turbines at the rate of one per day between now and 2030, enough to power every household in the country. Japan intendsto install up to 45 gigawatts by 2040. And the U.S. market is primed to take off, though the timing depends heavily on federal permitting decisions.

Scorpio says that these rapidly accelerating plans offer an excellent opportunity for shareholder value and return on investment. Compared to a fleet of Kamsarmax bulkers, a handful of high value WTIVs will bring "more predictable, higher and better-quality returns over multiple years . . . at comparatively low levels of leverage," according to managing director David Morant.

Scorpio's first WTIV is due for delivery in late 2023, and it has options for three more. In its investor prospectus, the firm predicts that the global market needs at least 15 hi-spec WTIVs by 2024 in order to meet global demand, and there are only five today. One more is currently on order in the United States, one in Japan and at least two in China.

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Scorpio Bulkers Takes $500M Writedown to Shift to Offshore Wind Sector - The Maritime Executive

Offshore wind in its sails – WorkBoat

The Biden administration takes over on Jan. 20, and when it does, its expected that offshore wind energys prospects in the U.S. will improve greatly.

As Kirk Moore writes in the January issue of WorkBoat, offshore wind occupied a curious position in the Trump administration often mocked and belittled by the president in public even as his own former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) forged ahead enabling plans for 15 East Coast offshore projects and studying prospects off California.

But in the new administration, expect to see more of 2010, when then-Interior Secretary Ken Salazar predicted offshore wind would become a major U.S. energy source. Also, expect Biden to revive the Obama administrations all of the above energy strategy.

This could prove to be a nice boost for the offshore service sector, which has been getting crushed in recent years.

Though Gulf of Mexico OSV operators and the Offshore Marine Service Association were late to the offshore wind party, they are now fully engaged. Recently, OMSA and offshore operators successfully lobbied Congress to pass several pieces of legislation to reaffirm that the 1953 Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act which governs oil and gas production in U.S. waters and favors using U.S. vessels and labor must likewise cover the renewable energy sector. It will provide parity between offshore oil and gas projects and offshore wind projects, said OMSA president Aaron Smith.

The Gulf offshore industry is a deep pool of talent for the developing wind industry. The first U.S. commercial offshore wind project, the Block Island Wind Farm off Rhode Island, was built in 2016 with help from Louisiana liftboat operators Aries Marine Corp. and Falcon Global LLC, and with foundation jackets and pilings supplied by Gulf Island Fabrication.

And while the incoming Biden administration is expected to dramatically scale back oil and gas permitting, it will likely face pressure to sustain oil development in the deepwater U.S. Gulf. Under the all of the above scenario, this, too, could help boost the beleaguered OSV industry.

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Offshore wind in its sails - WorkBoat

Dominion Gathers Jones Act Wind Turbine Installation Vessel Team – Offshore WIND

The Houston-based National Oilwell Varco (NOV) has secured contracts to design, and deliver equipment for the GustoMSC NG-16000X-SJ offshore wind turbine installation jack-up vessel ordered by Dominion Energy.

Designed by GustoMSC, a business unit within NOV, this first Jones Act-compliant vessel of its kind is being constructed by Keppel AmFELS at its Brownsville shipyard in Texas.

Seajacks will assist Dominion Energy during construction and operations oversight, the Virginia-based energy company said.

Along with the vessel design, NOV will also supply the vessels integrated jacking system.

The jack-ups hull will measure 144 metres by 56 metres with a depth of 11.5 metres, making it one of the worlds largest jack-up vessels.

The jack-up will accommodate up to 119 people, a 2,200-t main crane, and an 11,500-t carrying capacity.

At GustoMSC we are immensely proud to partner with Dominion Energy, Seajacks, and Keppel AmFELS as we make a historical step in US offshore wind, said GustoMSC commercial director Jan-Mark Meeuwisse.

Together we are working hard to develop the first purpose-built wind turbine installation jack-up vessel for use in US waters.

The Jones Act requires all vessels carrying goods between two US points be transported on ships built, owned, and operated by American citizens.

The Dominion vessel will be operational at the end of 2023 and is expected to base out of the Hampton Roads region of Virginia.

Once constructed, the jack-up will be available for charter hire, including by Dominion Energy Virginia, subject to the approval of the Virginia State Corporation Commission, in connection with the installation of its Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind commercial project.

Dominion Energy expects the vessel to operate continuously for several years through contracts with offshore wind projects in the US.

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Dominion Gathers Jones Act Wind Turbine Installation Vessel Team - Offshore WIND

Scottish policy ‘a vote of confidence’ in offshore wind and green hydrogen – Riviera Maritime Media

The Hydrogen Policy Statement suggests that unlocking Scotlands vast offshore wind potential could result in it producing large-scale green hydrogen that is competitively priced in a growing European market.

The Scottish Government will allocate 100M (US$133M) to the hydrogen sector over the next five years to support a green recovery and Scotlands transition to net zero. The policy states that Scotland is set to become a leading hydrogen nation, with an ambition to generate 5 GW of renewable and low-carbon hydrogen by 2030. Economic impact research suggests the industry has the potential to be worth up to 25Bn a year to the Scottish economy by 2045.

Scotlands Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse said, We are the first country in the UK to publish a Hydrogen Policy Statement that sets out how we can make the most of Scotlands massive potential in this new sector.

Hydrogen is rapidly emerging across the international community as a sustainable solution for the decarbonisation of the economy and a key element of the energy transition picture. Scotland is prepared to play its full part together with other European nations thats why were publishing this key policy statement.

Scotland has, in abundance, all the raw ingredients necessary for the production of low-cost hydrogen as well as one of the largest concentrations of offshore engineering expertise in the world that can harness renewable energy potential in technologies like wind, wave and tidal power, to produce green hydrogen.

Indeed, Scotland is one of the best placed nations anywhere in the world to develop competitively priced hydrogen for our own economys needs and to generate a surplus in supply to export to other European nations with emerging demand, but insufficient supply to meet their own needs.

In the policy document, Minister Wheelhouse said Scotland has an estimated 25% of all the wind resource in Europe. With 1 GW of installed capacity, rising to 11 GW by 2030, and rapidly decreasing costs, our offshore wind sector is forecast to grow significantly as Scotland and the UK progress towards meeting decarbonisation targets, he said. This adds to our already significant onshore wind capacity of 8.4 GW which could also be deployed to generate clean hydrogen.

We are globally renowned for innovation in offshore wind, including the worlds first floating offshore windfarm, Hywind Scotland, with a strong pipeline of planned projects to come. Scotland also has a strong track record for advancing hydrogen technologies and demonstrating its production and use in island and mainland projects.

As a nation, we have the opportunity and capability to benefit from the transition away from fossil fuels and produce large volumes of clean hydrogen which will not only help reduce Scotlands emissions and support meeting Scotlands challenging greenhouse gas emissions targets but will also allow Scotland to develop a role as an exporter of hydrogen to other partner nations and to create and protect jobs and provide economic benefit for Scotland.

Responding to publication of the policy, Xodus Group renewables division manager Scott Hamilton said, The commitments set out in the Hydrogen Policy Statement send a clear vote of confidence in the potential of green hydrogen from offshore wind.

It shows the potential to unlock a massive clean power generation resource, creating a clean fuel for Scottish industry and households and a valuable export commodity, supporting the supply chain and creating high-value jobs.

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Scottish policy 'a vote of confidence' in offshore wind and green hydrogen - Riviera Maritime Media

Japan aims to be world’s No. 3 offshore wind power producer in 2040 – The Japan Times

Japan aims to generate up to 45 gigawatts of power through offshore wind power in 2040, a level that would make the country the worlds third-largest generator of such power, as part of efforts to achieve net zero emissions of carbon dioxide by 2050, officials said Tuesday.

The target, corresponding to the electricity output of 45 nuclear reactors, is an ambitious one for Japan, which currently generates just 20,000 kilowatts through offshore wind farms and is not even among the top 10 generators using that power source. One gigawatt is equal to 1 million kilowatts.

In 2040, the European Union and China aim to produce 127 gigawatts and 107 gigawatts, respectively, according to a projection by the International Energy Agency.

Under the plan decided at a meeting Tuesday of officials from the economy and land ministries and the private sector, Japan will first aim to increase offshore wind power generation to 10 gigawatts by 2030, further raising it to between 30 gigawatts and 45 gigawatts in 2040, they said.

The government plans to provide various types of support for the industry including surveys on wind movements and geology of seabeds on which windmills will be installed to facilitate market entry by new operators, the officials said.

The cost to generate electricity from offshore wind power is expected to become cheaper than that of thermal power by sometime between 2030 and 2035, they said.

In fiscal 2018, fossil fuels such as coal and liquefied natural gas accounted for 77% of the countrys total energy source for power generation, followed by renewables at 17% and nuclear power at 6%.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga in October declared the goal to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. Related ministries have since been reviewing their energy policies in order to meet the goal.

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Japan aims to be world's No. 3 offshore wind power producer in 2040 - The Japan Times

North Sea Statfjord st partners sanction further wells – Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

The Statfjord C platform in the Norwegian North Sea.

(Photo: Harald Pettersen / Equinor ASA)

Offshore staff

STAVANGER, Norway Equinor and its partners have committed to a NOK3-billion ($345-million) project to improve recovery from the Statfjord st field in the Norwegian North Sea.

The field is connected via pipelines to the Statfjord C platform, 5 km (3.1 mi) to the southwest, by pipelines.

Under the new program, designed to produce a further 23 MMboe, four new wells will be drilled from existing subsea templates. This will also entail modifications on Statfjord C, and a new pipeline for gas lift.

Ultimately, Equinor aims to extend the lives of the platform and Statfjord st toward 2040.

In-place oil at Statfjord st, which came onstream in 1994, was originally estimated at 415 MMbbl. The current recovery factor of 56% should rise to 62% with the new facilities, which will be installed during 2022-24.

Other partners are Petoro, Vr Energi, Spirit Energy, Idemitsu Petroleum, and Wintershall Dea.

12/22/2020

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North Sea Statfjord st partners sanction further wells - Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

Boohoo owner tells MPs he could easily ‘take business offshore’ – The Guardian

Scrutiny of Boohoos relationship with Leicester suppliers who paid workers illegally low wages felt like punishment for not taking more business out of the UK, the companys founder, Mahmud Kamani, told MPs on Wednesday.

The billionaire owner of Boohoo was speaking to the environmental audit committee which is investigating the impact of fast fashion in an appearance that represented his most substantive public questioning since the scandal emerged this summer. Repeatedly he said that his company was committed to making good.

We will make Leicester right, we will make things correct, he said. That I promise you.

At other times Kamani seemed dismissive of the idea that, as group executive chair and founder of the company estimated to have been buying 70-80% of Leicesters garment output, he had any personal responsibility for problems there.

I cannot possibly know everything in this business, but I do know this is a priority in our business, he said.

In an occasionally abrasive manner Kamani claimed that an independent report by Alison Levitt QC which found that Boohoo was responsible for inexcusable failures, with a series of red flags being ignored, and prompted an apology stated there was no wrongdoing on Boohoos behalf.

The hearing found that Boohoo, begun by Kamani in 2006, had exited 64 Leicester factories since late 2019 as it sought to reform its supply chain, with 400 unannounced audits carried out this year. But neither Kamani nor its group director of responsible sourcing, Andrew Reaney, would say how many of those cases were to do with low pay.

Kamani sought to present himself as a market trader who had been very fortunate and learnt the ethics of hard work from his father. He apologised if his inexperience of political questioning had led him to answer slowly or stutter. The last 12 months have been very difficult for me, my family and my colleagues, he said.

He later appeared to raise the possibility that more of Boohoos business could be taken overseas if scrutiny of its UK supply chain became too onerous.

For us to move out of Leicester, its very easy for us to take all our production offshore, he said. Lots of people in the fashion industry have moved offshore. We are still here and sometimes, sometimes, it feels like we get punished for it, just sometimes.

With concerns among campaigners and industry sources that Boohoo was looking to move more of its supply base abroad, Kamani did not answer directly whether he had been looking to do this.

We are committed to Leicester, he said. Hopefully once we can work closely with factories, well hopefully increase our production and units in Leicester.

He also defended a Black Friday sale where crop-top garments went on sale for 6p as effective PR. The fact that were talking about it today means that that marketing worked, he said.

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Boohoo owner tells MPs he could easily 'take business offshore' - The Guardian

Sale of the offshore construction & cable-lay vessel Connector – PRNewswire

STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Dec. 5, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Ocean Yield ASA ("Ocean Yield" or "Company") has today entered into an agreement to sell the offshore construction and cable-lay vessel Connector to a third party. The vessel is expected to be delivered to the buyer during the fourth quarter.

Connector is a highly advanced subsea construction & cable-lay vessel that was operating on a long-term bareboat charter until February 2017. In anticipation of a market recovery, Ocean Yield has for the past years traded the vessel in the short-term market. As the market has remained challenging, Connector has contributed negatively to both net profit and cash flow.

Considering the current weak outlook for the oil service segment and that an industrial setup is required to operate the vessel efficiently in the cable-lay market, Ocean Yield believes it is in the best interest of the Company to dispose of the vessel as this will reduce the portfolio risk and improve net profit and cash flow. The sale will therefore strengthen the Company's dividend capacity going forward.

The sale will be cash flow neutral after settlement of debt related to the vessel. Ocean Yield will record a non-cash book loss related to the sale of approximately USD 70 million in the Q4 2020 financial statements. The Company expects only a marginal decrease in the book equity ratio at the end of Q4 compared to Q3, mainly explained by a reduction in total assets due to the sale of Connector and prepayment of debt.

CONTACT:

Company contact:Eirik Eide (CFO), Tel +47 24 13 01 91

Investor Relations contact:Marius Magelie (SVP Finance & Investor Relations), Tel +47 24 13 01 82

This information was brought to you by Cision http://news.cision.com

https://news.cision.com/ocean-yield/r/sale-of-the-offshore-construction---cable-lay-vessel-connector,c3249582

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Coalition of Florida businesses call on Congress to oppose offshore finfish farming – WMNF – WMNF

A group of 42 Florida businesses Wednesday sent a letter to the States congressional delegation asking it to block a proposed industrial finfish farm off the coast of Sarasota.

Businesses all along the Gulf of Mexico warn of disastrous effects to the environment and the Gulfs tourism industry.

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In an economic climate already decimated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Gulf businesses warned Congress turning the Gulfs federal waters into an economic experiment could be a death knell to tourism in the state.

Signers representing hotels; bars and restaurants; commercial and recreational fishing; retail and more wrote we must ensure that existing local businesses can bring back jobs and continue to create new opportunities for workers in our communities. If allowed to expand, this harmful industry will undermine that recovery process.

Advocates for offshore finfish farms say its an opportunity to increase domestic seafood yield. But Marianne Cufone, executive director of Recirculating Farms said its an experiment thats already failing around the globe.

Offshore finfish farming has been very problematic globally, Cufone said. In fact, so much so that other countries that have been previously considered world leaders in aquaculture, like Canada and Denmark, are moving away from the practice because its been so detrimental to their environment and economy.

In the last few months alone, Canada has recommitted itself to moving away from offshore net pen farms and Denmarks Environment Minister said the sea should not be a dustbin as she proposed legislation to move more fish farming to land.

An executive order from the Trump administration and legislation drafted by Sen. Marco Rubio cleared the way for the U.S.s first offshore aquaculture an open water cage for farmed finfish. The proposed Velella Epsilon project would put a floating fish farm about 45 miles west of Sarasota. Thats where parent company Ocean Era would raise about 20,000 Almaco Jack in a specially designed net pen.

U.S. federal waters in the Gulf are being eyed as areas of opportunity. Meaning one offshore farm would only be the beginning.

That doesnt sit well with Bob Zales II. Hes a Panama-based charter boat captain and de facto keeper of the realm for Floridas Gulf waters. Hes a leader in organizations like the National Association of Charter Boat Operators, Panama City Boatmen Association and Florida Guides Association. Hes also the fishery management consultant for the Southern Offshore Fishermens Association, a Madeira Beach-based group that advocates for keeping the Gulf clean and environmentally secure.

We cant take the risk. You look at COVID, everything today is a risk, Zales said. If you dont try to do the best you can to protect what youve got, youre risking your livelihood. Thats what we cant afford to do.

Data from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services shows seafood production in Florida accounted for 4,000 jobs and had an economic impact of more than $400 million in 2016 alone.

Zales said allowing offshore farming would take away those jobs and that money.

Whether youre commercial, whether your charter, whether youre private, he said. Without access to areas to fish, you have no opportunity to fish. With no opportunity, you have no fishing.

Its not just the physical space farms take up either. Cufone said farming introduces chemicals and pollutants through feed, antibiotics and waste. That can exacerbate Red Tide, a problem that costs the Gulf Coast and Florida about $20 million a year.

Things coming out of the farm like excess fish feed, fish waste and any chemicals or pharmaceuticals that are used on fish or on the cages to keep them clean, Cufone said. We dont need more of that in our environment. We already have pollution and water quality challenges.

Zales added theres always the threat of escape. Farmed fish can change the structure of an ecosystem. Canada is currently dealing with escaped fish interfering with wild salmon on its west coast. Earlier this week an Australian offshore net farm had an escape of around 130,000 farmed fish.

Zales said even the strongest of cages wouldnt be a match for the increased frequency and strength of storms in the Gulf.

If you look at a hurricane thatll roll through here and knockdown these massive oil production platforms that are built to withstand what they call 100-year-storms and they top them over, he said. I doubt very seriously if theres anybody out there that can create any kind of cage that will be able to withstand such damage from a storm. Youre not gonna convince me theyve got a fool-proof cage out there to do this.

Velella Epsilon has received a permit from the Environmental Protection Agency. Its awaiting a construction permit from the Army Corps of Engineers. Cufone said its not too late to shift the focus from offshore to land-based fish farming if the U.S. wants to up its domestic production.

Its just a smarter more eco-friendly approach, Cufone said. If we want to move forward with aquaculture in the United States, it ought to be done in recirculating farms.

A majority of seafood in the U.S. is imported. It sometimes comes from domestically sourced seafood thats shipped out for processing before being reimported.

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Coalition of Florida businesses call on Congress to oppose offshore finfish farming - WMNF - WMNF

US Wind Names Offshore Wind Pioneer Jeff Grybowski as CEO – Business Wire

BALTIMORE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, US Wind Inc. (US Wind) announced that it has named Jeffrey Grybowski as Chief Executive Officer. Grybowski will lead US Wind as the company embarks on development of a major offshore wind project off the coast of Maryland. In August, funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, Inc. (NYSE: APO) (together with its consolidated subsidiaries, Apollo) committed to invest up to $265 million in convertible debt and equity to acquire an equity stake in US Wind and fund development and construction costs for its offshore wind project.

Grybowski is the former Chief Executive Officer of Deepwater Wind, the pioneering American offshore wind company. Under Grybowskis leadership over nearly a decade, the company developed and constructed the Block Island Wind Farm, the first offshore wind farm in the United States, and secured a portfolio of offshore wind power contracts across multiple US East Coast states.

We are very excited to have Jeff lead our team at US Wind, said Riccardo Toto, Managing Director of Renexia SpA, the principal owner of US Wind. His experience in navigating the complex development system in the United States is unmatched. We are building an innovative company at US Wind, and Jeff is the perfect person to lead it.

Apollos Brad Fierstein, a member of US Winds board of directors, added, Jeff is a proven leader in US offshore wind, and an excellent addition to the US Wind platform as we execute on our mission to bring clean energy and new jobs to Maryland.

Im thrilled to be joining the US Wind team. We have big plans to deliver offshore wind to the state of Maryland, said Grybowski. This company had a strategic vision for offshore wind in the US long before others in Europe made the jump to this market. We will build on that vision and together with strong financial backing from Apollo Funds, we will make US Wind a major player in the offshore wind space, as a nimble and entrepreneurial company that knows how to execute complex projects in the US.

US Wind was an early mover in the offshore wind sector in the United States by acquiring the 80,000-acre federal lease area off of the coast of Maryland in 2014. In 2017, the Company was awarded Offshore Renewable Energy Credits (ORECs) from the State of Maryland for the first phase of its MarWin project. In total, the Companys lease area can support approximately 1,500 MW of offshore wind capacity. In 2019, Maryland passed the Clean Energy Jobs Act, which increased the states offshore wind requirements, calling for an additional 1,200 MW to be procured from developers with projects near Maryland.

About US Wind

US Wind was founded in 2011 and has established its position as a premier offshore wind energy development company in the United States. In 2014, US Wind obtained a federal lease for site control to develop approximately 1.5 GW of offshore wind power generation off the coast of Maryland. US Wind is majority owned by Renexia SpA, a leader in renewable energy development in Italy and a subsidiary of Toto Holding SpA. Toto Holding SpA has more than 40 years of experience specializing in large construction and infrastructure projects, primarily in the energy, transportation, and aviation sectors.

About Apollo

Apollo is a leading global alternative investment manager with offices in New York, Los Angeles, San Diego, Houston, Bethesda, London, Frankfurt, Madrid, Luxembourg, Mumbai, Delhi, Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Tokyo. Apollo had assets under management of approximately $433 billion as of September 30, 2020 in credit, private equity and real assets funds invested across a core group of nine industries where Apollo has considerable knowledge and resources. For more information about Apollo, please visit http://www.apollo.com.

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With offshore wind, Virginia hopes a 21st-century manufacturing boom will offset a hefty price tag – Virginia Mercury

First in a series on Virginias transition to a carbon-free electric grid. Tomorrow: What role will utility-scale solar projects play?

Maybe, if you squint really hard and the skies are clear, you might be able to convince yourself that you see them, out on the horizon: two turbines spinning far offshore of Virginia Beach.

You cant, of course the distance to the Dominion Energy-owned offshore wind outpost is too great. Bill Murray, a senior executive with Dominion, describes it this way: Imagine, he says, that the USS Wisconsin, a World War II-era battleship now docked at Norfolk, were to be beached at Sandbridge and from there fire its 16-inch guns, capableof traveling 21 miles. Those guns could not hit these turbines, said Murray.

Until recently, Virginias offshore wind dreams seemed to many an equally long shot. Dominions two test turbines, known as the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind Pilot, were a decade in the making. During that time offshore wind boomed in Europe and China, but the U.S., preoccupied with the glut of natural gas unlocked by the shale revolution, made few inroads into the technology. Rhode Islands Block Island wind farm was the nations first offshore wind venture in state waters; Dominions CVOW pilot 27 miles off the coast is the first in federal waters.

Today, however, U.S. enthusiasm for natural gas is wavering, and offshore wind has seen a dramatic upswing in interest. Roughly a dozen major offshore wind projects have been announced along the East Coast with the potential to provide 30 gigawatts of energy to residents of the Atlantic seaboard. Much of the activity has occurred in the maritime states of New England and the upper mid-Atlantic, especially Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey. The farther south you go, the less the idea seems to have caught on.

Virginia is a major exception. Here, offshore wind has become the most ambitious and expensive part of the states plan to meet Democratic Gov. Ralph Northams goal of achieving a carbon-free electric grid by 2050. Last December, Dominion announced plans to build the nations largest offshore wind farm in its federal lease area off Virginia Beach at an estimated cost of $8 billion. Wind developer Avangrid, which is behind the Kitty Hawk project in North Carolina, is also eyeing the state as a possible destination for its power, although no contracts have been signed.

Electrically, the easiest place for us to connect is in Virginia Beach, said Eric Thumma, Avangrids senior director of new business for offshore wind.

When Democrats took the majority in both houses of the General Assembly in 2020, they came in with the desire to remake Virginias electric grid. Offshore wind quickly became the most controversial part of their proposals due to its cost and the profits the politically powerful Dominion stood to make from its development. The Virginia Clean Economy Acts declaration that 5.2 gigawatts of the resource more than all of the states nuclear units and its largest gas-fired plant combined is in the public interest provoked a bitter fight that continues to divide Democrats.

Tensions only increased after a ProPublica-Richmond Times-Dispatch investigation earlier this fall uncovered a last-minute change to the law that authorizes Dominion to spend an extra $2.5 billion on its offshore enterprise. Depending on who you ask, the VCEA is either another utility giveaway or a vital part of a clean energy portfolio that will act as an engine for economic growth.

Much of the uneasiness over offshore wind comes down to its cost. Because Dominion is in the generation as well as transmission and distribution business, it reaps profits from building things and the bigger the project, the greater the profits. At an estimated $8 billion, CVOW will be the largest its ever undertaken. A second wind farm of equal size would add billions more to the bottom line.

Offshore wind is necessary, Dominion executives say. We simply cant rely on solar alone or energy efficiency alone to get us to a carbon-free grid, said Katharine Bond, the companys vice president of public policy and state affairs. Industry experts agree wind is an ideal complement to solar because it tends to peak at night and in the winter, when solar is at its lowest. And for Dominion, whose Virginia territory is less well suited to onshore wind than the mountaintop ridges enjoyed by Appalachian Power, that leaves offshore wind as the primary solution.

A carbon-free grid has to be a more diverse grid because of the intermittency of renewables, said Murray. Theres a tendency a little bit in energy policy to say, OK, solar right now is the cheapest renewable, lets just do all solar. And more incremental energy between noon and five is at some point not helpful.

But while few supporters of weaning Virginias grid off carbon think offshore wind shouldnt be part of the portfolio, many caution that Dominion shouldnt be given carte blanche on spending.

Regulators ability to review offshore wind costs remains unclear. The VCEA includes language indicating the commission should sign off on CVOW costs unless certain specific conditions arent met, but even State Corporation Commissioners seemed unsure during hearings this October about how restrictive the law is. Whats the play in the joints that is left after need and cost have been essentially predetermined? Judge Mark Christie asked at one point.

Still, many clean energy advocates say regulators retain ultimate oversight. The Clean Economy Acts language favoring renewables is an expression of the General Assembly that they support this type of generation technology, but its not a mandate for the commission to approve any particular project, energy attorney Will Reisinger told regulators during the same hearings. In an extended legal argument touching on the laws history and wording, Southern Environmental Law Center attorney Will Cleveland said the commission retains ultimate authority over whether a specific proposed offshore wind projects costs are reasonable and prudent.

Whether regulators will agree is a question several months from being answered.

Energy issues, of course, have always been intricately intertwined with economic ones. Dominion has been in the economic development business for decades, said Murray. Electric utilities are for economic development. In a way its altruistic, in a way its self-serving because any type of economic development plugs into the grid.

But offshore wind takes the connection to a new level. Virtually all of the discussion and work surrounding Virginias wind goals center not on energy, but on the economy.

Part of that focus is due to the high threshold for entry into offshore wind development. Because the investments required for the technology are so high and only a limited number of government leases for sites are available, the industrys pool of players is small.

In Virginia right now, Dominion is at the helm. The utility is the only company that owns a lease in federal waters off the states coast. And unlike other utilities to the north, which have relied on non-utilities to develop projects that they then acquire power from, Dominion is actively involved in not only developing but building offshore wind, and it has indicated in its long-range planning that its interested in developing more than the CVOW project, and potentially all 5.2 gigawatts of the offshore target.

Still, other companies like Avangrid and Danish firm rsted, which partnered with Dominion on the CVOW pilot, have signaled strong interest in Virginia. rsted has leased 40 acres at the Portsmouth Marine Terminal, and Thumma said Avangrid, which opened an office in Virginia Beach this fall, is open to lots of different opportunities. Siemens Gamesa has also publicly said Hampton Roads is among the locations its considering for a turbine manufacturing facility.

One of the key elements of getting a project done is making sure you have an offtaker, said Bruce Burcat, executive director of the Mid-Atlantic Renewable Energy Coalition. And what the VCEA does, just like similar types of statutes in states like Maryland or New Jersey or Delaware or Pennsylvania, is there is now a market for the offtake of the energy.

Still, all eyes are on Dominion. How the utility navigates the state and federal permitting processes it has to undergo to get the full CVOW project underway will provide a template for other companies interested in Virginia who may be wary to put down money in these early months.

Theres going to be a reticence to invest until we actually see projects and steel in the waters, said Thumma.

The VCEA doesnt limit wind development to offshore. Onshore wind is folded into the 16,100 megawatt and 600 megawatt targets set for Dominion and Appalachian Power to meet by 2035, and both welcomed proposals for onshore projects this summer.

Still, unlike the flat and windy Midwest, Virginia is less suited to onshore wind, with the most promising areas located along its western ridges in Appalachian Power territory. One of the biggest challenges with Virginia and onshore wind is the wind resources are located in the most difficult terrain, said Director of Mines, Minerals and Energy John Warren. Theres a limited amount of project sites that really fit for large utility-scale onshore wind. To date, only one, the Rocky Forge project developed by Apex Clean Energy, has made it through the permitting process in the commonwealth. Utility executives are expecting more to come. In October, Dominion Director of Integrated Resource Planning Glen Kelly told the SCC that the utility is very open to onshore wind and that it expects the resource to have a more robust presence in the utilitys future planning.

Dominion, for its part, is confident. Pointing to its successful navigation of the federal permitting process for the CVOW pilot a process no other company has completed Dominion executive Bond said the utility has a set of experiences that others in the United States dont necessarily have. With that experience, Dominion is moving swiftly to develop the full CVOW project. After months surveying its lease area and taking core samples to determine how the massive turbines should be engineered, it intends to file its required construction and operations plan with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management this December.

The company is also hoping to skirt some of the environmental problems other high-profile projects like Vineyard Wind off Massachusetts have encountered. CVOWs location 27 miles off the coast reduces concerns for birds, said Bond. It limits fisheries impacts as well, although the states 19 black sea bass and conch fishermen remain concerned about how closures due to construction and the presence of 188 turbines, three substations and extensive cabling will affect their livelihood.

The real challenge that were running into is theres not a great roadmap, said Todd Janeski, a fisheries coordinator with the Virginia Coastal Zone Management Program. Ultimately, how this project does move forward here will inform other efforts down the road.

Ironically, then, with Dominion preparing to file its plans with federal regulators, most of the offshore wind action in Virginia is happening on dry land.

These preparations are all about the economy. Because offshore wind turbines require manufacturing on a monumental scale and the U.S. has no supply chain in place to build them, states from Massachusetts to Virginia are scrambling to position themselves as offshore wind hubs that can not only operate new wind farms but manufacture and maintain the parts that run them.

Were trying to create an industry from scratch, said Doug Smith, president and CEO of the Hampton Roads Alliance, an economic development group closely involved in bringing offshore wind to Virginia.

Local and state officials, as well as regional business groups, think Hampton Roads is one of the best candidates for the role. The region possesses a deepwater port that, thanks to the U.S. naval base at Norfolk, isnt obstructed by bridges that could block vessels ferrying turbine components out to sea. The Navys presence has also fostered a robust manufacturing sector thats oriented toward shipbuilding but could easily expand into offshore wind. And Dominion has plans underway to develop a Hampton Roads-based vessel capable of installing wind turbine components a major hole in the U.S. portfolio.

Theres no harbor or port that has the existing infrastructure and workforce that Virginia has, said Chris Gullickson, director of economic development for the Port of Virginia.

Virginia has already committed significant resources to convincing the fledgling industry that Hampton Roads is the ideal site for a hub, though it has also reached an agreement with North Carolina and Maryland to collaborate in promoting the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic as a regional center for the new energy source. The states 2020 budget included $40 million for upgrades at the Portsmouth Marine Terminal, primarily dealing with soil stabilization and reinforcement that will ensure the port can handle parts of turbines that will stand taller than the Washington Monument and have blades longer than seven football fields placed end to end.

This is the last small piece that we need that will make a huge difference to the industry, said Jennifer Palestrant, chief deputy of the Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy.

Meanwhile, the 2020 General Assembly established a new Division of Offshore Wind within the department that Palestrant said aims to be the convener for how we develop offshore wind and allotted $375,000 to stand the new office up. Among the new partners for the division? The Hampton Roads Alliance, which this September was awarded more than half a million dollars in state GO Virginia grant funds to help develop the offshore wind supply chain. The funding followed the groups establishment this summer of an office in Frankfurt, Germany, that will allow the Alliance to explore partnerships in Europe, where Smith said the major players of the industry are. One consultancy, PM&P, has been working with the Alliance to develop a strategic plan for how Hampton Roads can attract offshore wind manufacturers.

Along the East Coast, theres going to be a limited number of hubs around the supply chain, said Smith. We want to really understand what that looks like.

One thing is clear: if Hampton Roads becomes one of the East Coasts top offshore wind hubs, Virginias looking at a lot of new jobs. One study by Mangum Economics estimates that for every gigawatt of offshore wind developed, Virginia could see 5,200 new jobs annually.

Most of those are likely to be local to Hampton Roads. The VCEA sets no firm quotas for the hiring of Virginia workers for wind farms, although it does require Dominion to draft a plan for how it will use both local workers and veterans in building out its project a provision Southeastern Wind Coalition President Katharine Kollins said is nebulous but important.

Still, she pointed out, offshore wind energy production is labor intensive.

A solar farm takes care of itself, she said. An offshore wind project needs daily operations and maintenance on at least one of the turbines. Youve got folks out there every single day who are ensuring these things are running.

The more manufacturing operations Virginia attracts, the more that workforce is likely to grow as other states build out their projects.

Its not just our project. If you look at the queue, the pipeline of projects up and down the East Coast continues to grow, said Dominion spokesperson Rayhan Daudani. You develop that workforce not just to construct the 2.6 gigawatts and then have the ongoing (operations and maintenance), but all up and down the East Coast there will be the opportunity to train them here, hire them here.

One potential game changer would be the development of Dominions offshore wind vessel. Currently the only ships capable of installing offshore wind infrastructure are European, but the federal Jones Act bars foreign ships from carrying shipments between U.S. ports. If the utility can get its vessel in operation by 2023 as planned, it would prove a major inducement for manufacturers to locate near its home base of Hampton Roads.

Training, of course, will be necessary. Theres only a handful of people in Virginia that are qualified to even step foot on a turbine, said Paul Olsen, executive director of programs and partnerships at Old Dominion University, which has partnered with DMME to help advance offshore wind in the state. We need to create hundreds of skilled positions.

Officials are looking to Virginias community and technical colleges, as well as manufacturers, to help fill the gap. In October, Gov. Northam announced the creation of a new training alliance to offer certifications for offshore wind work. Partners include Martinsvilles New College Institute, Centura College and Norfolks Mid-Atlantic Maritime Academy. And officials like Palestrant said they expect skills from Hampton Roads existing maritime industry to be easily transferable.

The technical colleges are already very very interested in providing programs for students to then go straight into these jobs, said Kollins. Once we see the development really start to take place youre really going to see more and more students entering these courses knowing theres a job for them at the end of the day.

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With offshore wind, Virginia hopes a 21st-century manufacturing boom will offset a hefty price tag - Virginia Mercury

An offshore wind farm with the ability to power one million households’ is fully up and running – CNBC

The Borssele 1&2 offshore wind farm is located in waters off the coast of Zeeland, the Netherlands.

Orsted

A major offshore wind farm in the Netherlands is now fully operational, with its owners, Danish energy firm Orsted, claiming it provides enough green electricity to power one million households.

Situated 23 kilometers (around 14.3 miles) off the coast of Zeeland, in the southwest of the Netherlands, the 752 megawatt (MW) Borssele 1 & 2 offshore wind farm spans an area of 112 square kilometers. It uses 94 wind turbines from Siemens Gamesa.

In an announcement Friday, Orsted described the facility as the second-largest operating offshore wind farm in the world. The largest, Hornsea One, has a capacity of 1.2 gigawatts (GW) and was also developed by Orsted.

News of Borssele 1 & 2's commissioning is the latest example of European countries embracing offshore wind and comes after the European Union said it wanted to increase its offshore wind capacity from 12 to 300 GW by 2050.

The "Offshore Renewable Energy Strategy" from the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, also aims for 40 GW of ocean energy such as tidal and wave power within the same time frame.

A number of major offshore wind projects located in European waters are now in the pipeline. These include the Dogger Bank Wind Farm in Britain, which left the EU in January 2020.

A 50:50 joint venture between SSE Renewables and Equinor, the Dogger Bank facility will have a total capacity of 3.6 GW once completed, making it the largest in the world.

At the end of last week, it was announced that a deal to fund the first two phases of the project had been completed. According to SSE, investment for Dogger Bank A and B will amount to approximately 6 billion (around $8 billion).

While Europe is now home to a mature offshore wind sector, the one in the U.S. is still relatively new.

The country's first offshore wind farm the 30 MW, five-turbine Block Island Wind Farm, which is also operated by Orsted only started commercial operations at the end of 2016.

The next few years could see the sector develop, however, with companies starting to invest large amounts of money in schemes located off the East Coast.

Back in September, for instance, oil and gas giant BP took 50% stakes in Equinor's Empire Wind and Beacon Wind projects, which are located off the coasts of New York State and Massachusetts respectively.

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An offshore wind farm with the ability to power one million households' is fully up and running - CNBC