Monthly Archives: July 2022

NFL division betting: As Browns wait on news, Bengals and Ravens top AFC North odds – Yahoo Sports

Posted: July 23, 2022 at 1:14 pm

At one point this offseason, the Cleveland Browns were the favorites to win the AFC North.

A lot has changed, even without a resolution to the Deshaun Watson mess. The Browns are looking at a long suspension for their new $230 million quarterback. Baker Mayfield was shipped off to the Carolina Panthers, and the Browns will pay $10.5 million of his salary just to be rid of him. Nobody would favor the Browns to win the AFC North with Jacoby Brissett at quarterback. The odds at BetMGM have shifted.

There are two teams near the top of the AFC North odds. One has been a contender in the division for a long time. The other is a team on the rise, coming off a surprising run to the Super Bowl.

Here are the odds to win the AFC North:

Baltimore Ravens +150

Cincinnati Bengals +185

Browns +300

Pittsburgh Steelers +900

Before we get to the two top teams, there is a case to be made for the other two.

The Browns might be in trouble if Watson gets a year-long suspension, but no decision has been made by the NFL. It's obviously a complicated issue. Nobody can predict what the NFL will do. If you believe Watson will play at least half of the season, and a talented roster can ground and pound its way to some wins while Cleveland waits, there's a reason the Browns were favored to win the division a few months ago.

The Steelers' odds are long for a franchise that always seems to be in the playoffs. Coach Mike Tomlin has never had a losing season. Ben Roethlisberger is gone, but he hadn't been helping much dating back to late in the 2020 season. If you believe in the infrastructure of the Steelers, a 2021 playoff team, then 9-to-1 odds aren't that bad.

However, it does seem like the AFC North will be decided by a two-team race.

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow led his team to an AFC North title last season. (AP Photo/Jeff Dean)

The Ravens had a hard-luck 2021 season. They had a ton of injuries and a bunch of close losses late in the season that kept them out of the playoffs. But those injured players should be back, Lamar Jackson is still an electrifying player, and coach John Harbaugh has had just two losing seasons since getting the job in 2008. Baltimore was longer than 2-to-1 odds earlier in the offseason but bettors have been taking them and those odds have gotten shorter. That's justified.

It's also OK if you believe in the Bengals. The Bengals got hot late and won the division last year. They dominated the Ravens in both meetings. There is probably some regression coming, but perhaps that will be offset by natural improvement from young stars like quarterback Joe Burrow and receivers Ja'Marr Chase and Tee Higgins. Perhaps the surge we saw late last season was a sign of things to come.

I prefer the stability of the Ravens, who can't possibly have such bad injury luck two seasons in a row. But even as training camps are about to start, there's still plenty of uncertainty in the AFC North.

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After collapses and offseason chaos, Auburn looks to the future – Yahoo Sports

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ATLANTA As Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin spoke, leading off the final day of SEC Media Days, a grid of the Tigers 2022 schedule flashed on the screen above him. Georgia awaits, as do LSU, Ole Miss, Texas A&M and, of course, Alabama. Its a brutal schedule, and it doesnt even include Auburns toughest opponent.

As always, Auburns greatest challenge in 2022 will be Auburn itself.

Sporting a crisp blue and orange tie and a tight haircut, Harsin leaned forward at the podium, his body language as outwardly aggressive as any coach this week. After a few perfunctory remarks, he took a run at the elephant in the room: the multi-pronged February controversy that nearly cost him his job.

There was an inquiry. It was uncomfortable. It was unfounded. It presented an opportunity for people to personally attack me, my family, and also our program, Harsin said. And it didn't work.

Harsin didnt want to dwell on the events of the offseason, but they will define his tenure at Auburn, whether its measured in months, years or decades. He arrived in Auburn a year ago from Boise State, where hed won nearly 80 percent of his teams games. In the first few weeks at Auburn, he kept that streak going, leading the Tigers to a 6-2 record.

But then the wheels fell off, the engine dropped out, and the entire frame cracked. Auburn lost its last five games of the season, a staggering face-plant that included a blown 28-3 lead to Mississippi State, a blown two-touchdown lead against South Carolina, a blown double-digit lead against Alabama in the quadruple-overtime Iron Bowl and a blown fourth-quarter lead against Houston in the season-ending Birmingham Bowl.

Auburn squandered opportunity after opportunity in the closing weeks of 2021. With every loss, the foundation beneath Harsin cracked a little more, and the support for him within the Auburn administration shrunk.

In the weeks after the Birmingham Bowl, players and coaches alike ran from the Auburn program like it was the last day of school. Twenty players, including quarterback Bo Nix, and five coaches, including one whod been on the job for just six weeks, fled the Plains, some with parting shots.

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In a since-deleted Instagram post, defensive tackle Lee Hunter, who transferred to UCF, wrote that "Coach Harsin has the true mindset for a winner but has a terrible mindset as a person, adding the reason I chose to leave auburn because we got treated like we wasn't good enough and like dogs."

At the same time, ugly rumors about Harsins personal life surfaced, further complicating his viability as a coach. Social media lit up with allegations, each wilder than the one before. His wife Kes took to Instagram with a message: Rumors are carried by haters, spread by fools, and accepted by idiots.

Several players also expressed support for Harsin on Twitter. We didnt need a best friend we needed a coach, captain Chandler Wooten wrote. thats what we had.

Questions about Harsins personal and professional life alike spurred the Auburn administration into action, starting with a statement indicating that the university was judiciously collecting information from a variety of perspectives.

Decisions regarding the future of Auburn and its Athletics programs, as always, are made in the interests of our great university and in fairness to all concerned, the school said in a statement. We do not make institutional decisions based on social media posts or media headlines.

The university did, however, have to make decisions with an eye on the bottom line. Harsin had an $18 million buyout in his contract, and the university was already paying former coach Gus Malzahn a $21.5 million buyout after firing him in 2020. Paying $40 million to coaches not on staff would be tough for even Auburn to stomach.

All of this unfolded while Harsin was on vacation in Mexico. He returned in mid-February to fight for his job, and met with both outgoing and incoming Auburn presidents, among other university officials. A group of players also campaigned on Harsins behalf, talking him up to various administration members.

We knew we wanted to back him, wanted him to be our head coach, said senior tight end John Samuel Shenker, one of the players who talked up Harsin to university officials. Thats something we all bought into, so we did everything we could to ensure he stayed there.

The gambit worked, at least in the sense that Harsin kept his job. But Harsins critics charge that his recruiting abilities remain a question mark at best. Rivals 2022 rankings place the Tigers at 18th in the nation, fifth in the SEC West and eighth in the SEC overall, 10th if future members Texas and Oklahoma are included.

Moreover, theres that late-season collapse. Either one would be enough to raise concerns on the Plains, but together, theres a sense of urgency around Auburn thats unlike any other in the SEC right now. The doubters and critics are out there waiting for Harsin's first stumble.

We've told our recruits: watch, Harsin said. I think the ones that have been on our campus, they see the energy and the vibe, what's happening, how the players are responding, coaches are connecting, everything that we're doing. There's a great energy in our program right now. There's alignment in our program right now.

The offseason controversy brought us a lot closer, Shenker said. I think there was a flip-the-switch after it happened. Everybody was pushing for him to come back, so when he came back, it was, Lets go. Lets get to work.

Anytime we're going backwards, talking about the past, we're not moving forward, talking about the future, Harsin said. We're focused on bigger and better things It's made us, in my opinion, a much stronger football team and program. That will continue.

Auburn will be at the center of the growing SEC-Big Ten rivalry early in the season, squaring off in a proxy battle against Penn State. If the Tigers can win that game, Harsin will get his wish, to focus on whats ahead. But if Auburn stumbles again, whats momentarily past will once again become the present.

Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin at SEC Media Days. (Dale Zanine / USA TODAY Sports)

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Contact Jay Busbee at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or on Twitter at @jaybusbee.

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Tennis betting: Players to watch leading up to the US Open – Yahoo Sports

Posted: at 1:14 pm

The North American hardcourt swing is a go after a short stint on clay post-Wimbledon. Three majors are in the books, with Rafael Nadal winning both the 2022 Australian Open and French Open to break the record with 22 major titles won. Former World No. 1 Novak Djokovic won his seventh Wimbledon title to sit one major title behind Nadal. That leaves ATPs fourth major of the year, the US Open, on deck in late August.

Transitioning from clay to grass back to hardcourt makes for an interesting dynamic on tour, one that bettors could benefit from. Heres what you need to know to prepare for the North American hardcourt swing leading up to the US Open in New York.

Novak Djokovic +160

Daniil Medvedev +240

Carlos Alcaraz +335

Rafael Nadal +550

Stefanos Tsitsipas +1000

Daniil Medvedev returns a ball against Aslan Karatsev in his second round match during day five of the Mallorca Championships on June 22. (Cristian Trujillo/Quality Sport Images/Getty Images)

Clay brings volatility because of the inconsistency of the surface. The players who excel on the red dirt are good with both physical and mental stamina as the rallies are long and grueling. Grass is about big serves and quick points. Those who can serve and volley or play well at the net typically have a good grass season. Action is back to hardcourt where the player pool of who can win opens up. Those who play well from the baseline will contend, and the ATP has a lot of baseliners nowadays.

Wimbledon put a ban on this group of players from participating in the third major of the year, leaving Daniil Medvedev (No. 1), Andrey Rublev (No. 8), Karen Khachanov (No. 26), Aslan Karatsev (No. 37) and Ilya Ivashka (No. 53) sidelined. Most have made an appearance during the clay break, with the exception of Medvedev. That leads me to the start of my list of players to watch in the lead-up events to the US Open.

Daniil Medvedev

Its easy to forget Medvedev because it feels like its been so long since weve seen him. Clay is not particularly his best surface, but he spent most of the clay season recovering from an injury anyway. He then had a couple of deep runs on grass, losing back-to-back finals in the Libema Open and the Halle Open. Meddy has 13 tour titles, six won on outdoor hard, including 2018 Winston-Salem Open, 2019 ATP Masters 1000 Cincinnati, 2021 ATP Masters 1000 Canada, and of course, the 2021 US Open, where he defeated Djokovic in straight sets in the final.

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That makes four of his six outdoor hardcourt titles won during the later part of the year. Djokovic is the best returner in the world but you could definitely put Medvedev up there right next to him. His length and wingspan makes it really difficult to get anything past him. My only gripe is that Medvedev lacks the variety I would expect to see from someone holding the World No. 1 title, but what he is good at, the baseline game, hes really good at. This is Medvedevs time to shine.

Taylor Fritz

Im still waiting for that breakthrough. Its coming. The 24-year-old American is so close to having that big-time win. Im not talking about defeating an injured Nadal in the Indian Wells final, I'm talking about breaking through that big-time moment in a major. Could this be the season it happens? Fritz pushed Djokovic to five sets in the 2021 Australian Open third round, pushed Tsitsipas to five sets in the 2022 Australian Open fourth round, and nearly picked off Nadal losing in a fifth-set tiebreak in the quarterfinals of last months Wimbledon.

Fritz has the weapons to excel in not only these lead-up events but also in New York. He has the serve, power strokes both on the forehand and backhand, and is now gaining the confidence of contending in these marquee matchups. Fritz doesnt hold a good record, 16-16 in the five prelim events to the US Open, but hes evolving. His best record is in Los Cabos, a 9-4 win/loss record that perhaps he could look to expand on.

Dominic Thiem

Is Thiem back? It has been a rough couple of years for the 2020 US Open champ. The Austrian, who peaked as World No. 3 in the rankings from March 2020 through February 2021, has since dropped all the way down to No. 352 and currently sits at No. 274. Why? Surgery from a wrist injury. After winning the 2020 US Open, Thiem delivered one of the greatest comebacks, defeating Nick Kyrgios in five sets of the third round of the 2021 Australian Open after going down two sets to love. I always mark that match as the one that broke him. Thiem went 5-7 after, playing his last match of the year in June 2021 and not making his tour return until April 2022.

Including last year, Thiem was on a 10-match losing streak but has now won six of his last eight matches since early July. The one-handed backhand is still a thing of beauty and his power forehand is making its way back to full force. What Thiem needed was confidence and it looks like hes finding it just in time for a new hardcourt season. Its unclear which events hell be playing prior to the next major but backing him is something to consider again as hes only getting stronger, more confident and more in form with each match.

Carlos Alcaraz

How far can the Spaniard go? Were about to find out. Alcaraz is sixth in the rankings and is still only 19 years old. At the time of writing, Carlitos holds a 38-5 record in 2022, is 13-0 in ATP 500 events, has reached the quarterfinal in seven events, the semifinal in six and has won four titles. Hes played in only 10 tournaments. It was the 2021 US Open where he started to show glimpses of his future progression, defeating Tsitsipas in a fifth-set tiebreak in the third round. He followed that up with another five-set win over Peter Gojowczyk, but by the time he reached the quarterfinal, he did not have the health to continue and retired early in the second set against Felix Auger-Aliassime.

He certainly has health and fitness now. Itll be interesting to see what Alcaraz can produce the rest of the year. He has all the weapons to contend for a major the slice, drop shot, kick serve, power strokes, the court sense. And now he has the experience of running deep in tournaments and winning.

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EFCC arrests 18 suspected Yahoo boys in Abuja – Daily Post Nigeria

Posted: at 1:14 pm

Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, have arrested 18 suspected internet fraudsters in Abuja.

The suspects were identified as Innocent Samson, Obiora Eze, Ifeanyi Joseph, Isidore Chinedu, Badaki Linus, Ameh Nick, Kelvin Chima, Akwa Iwu Promise Ifeanyi, Adekunle Samuel.

Others are Abutu John, Testimony Mathiew, Omale Mary Ochanya (female), Afam Darlington Edwin, Henry John, Urochukwu Abel, Ogieto Gift, Innocent Gideon, Ojimini Maduemyi Raymond, Mathiew Timothy, and Kingsley Chukwuemeka.

A statement issued on the Commissions Twitter page said the suspects were arrested on July 19, 2022, at Army Estate Phase Five, Kurudu, Abuja, following intelligence reports received by the Commission about their alleged involvement in internet-related fraud.

Items recovered from the suspects include three cars: a Lexus RX 350, Lexus ES 350, and Peugeot 306, a motorbike, six laptop computers, and mobile phones.

The anti-graft agency added that the suspects will be charged to court after investigations are concluded.

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Proposed Texas offshore wind farm could power 2.3 million homes – The Texas Tribune

Posted: at 1:12 pm

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HOUSTON The Gulf of Mexicos first offshore wind farms will be developed off the coasts of Texas and Louisiana, the Biden administration announced Wednesday, and together theyre projected to produce enough energy to power around 3 million homes.

The wind farms likely will not be up and running for years, energy analysts and the states grid operator said, but the announcement from the U.S. Interior Department is the first step in ramping up offshore wind energy in the United States, which has lagged behind that of Europe and China. The only two operating offshore wind energy farms in the U.S. are off the coasts of Rhode Island and Virginia, which together produce 42 megawatts of electricity enough to power fewer than 2,500 homes.

One of the new wind projects announced Wednesday will be developed 24 nautical miles off the coast of Galveston, covering a total of 546,645 acres bigger than the city of Houston with the potential to power 2.3 million homes, according to the U.S. Interior Departments Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. The other project will be developed near Port Arthur, about 56 nautical miles off the coast of Lake Charles, Louisiana, covering 188,023 acres with the potential to power 799,000 homes.

Its exciting to see offshore wind in the Gulf getting closer to reality, said Luke Metzger, executive director of Environment Texas, an environmental protection group. With strong winds in the evenings when we need energy the most, offshore wind in the Gulf of Mexico would greatly complement Texas onshore renewable energy resources, help bolster our shaky electric grid and help our environment.

The wind farms will join a growing number of oil drilling rigs off the coast of Texas, including near Galveston, where the oil platforms dot the horizon looking out from Galvestons beaches. The Biden administration also recently has opened up land in the Gulf of Mexico for more offshore oil and gas drilling leases.

Gov. Greg Abbotts office did not respond to a request for comment about the new offshore wind energy developments.

Offshore wind has a great potential in Texas, Brad Jones, president of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which manages Texas main power grid, told The Texas Tribune on Thursday. It will take some time to develop, and that time will be based on how quickly we can put together port facilities, the specialized ships that are necessary and train our labor force to achieve this type of development. It is new for the U.S.

Texas is already the countrys largest wind power producer and has land-based wind farms up and down the Gulf Coast, where winds typically blow harder.

Wind energys contributions to the Texas power grid vary depending on where, and how hard, the wind blows across the state. On Tuesday, when Texas hit a new record for energy consumption, wind and solar power combined to provide 25% of the energy on the grid, ERCOT said. On July 11, when ERCOT asked Texans to conserve electricity because demand threatened to exceed supply, wind generation dropped to less than 10% of its overall capacity.

ERCOT forecasters said they typically dont expect a lot of wind energy during hot summer days because during summer winds tend to be stronger at night.

Offshore wind provides much steadier energy production than wind farms on land in Texas, Jones said. With the extraordinary growth of Texas population and economy, Jones said we have to keep pace with that development.

So having an additional resource that can provide generation to Texans to keep the lights on is a value to all of us, Jones said.

Metzger and energy analysts said companies are interested in developing offshore wind projects in Texas, but its too early to tell how quickly they will be built and how much they will cost.

New financial incentives from the federal or state governments could speed up completion of the projects, the analysts said, but its unclear whether that will happen.

The commercial appetite is there it really is about the regulatory hurdles that exist, said Kenneth B. Medlock III, an energy expert at Rice University. Theres a lot of interest, without a doubt. Companies are actively lobbying to try to get these projects done.

Leaders in neighboring Louisiana have been actively working to attract wind energy production. Louisianas most recent climate plan, released in February, set a goal of generating 5 gigawatts of offshore wind power by 2035, which could power millions of homes there. Texas does not have a state climate plan.

Louisiana, unlike Texas, has been really bullish on developing offshore wind and offering economic incentives to offshore wind, Metzger said.

Still, U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Houston, said Texas has consistently led in the offshore energy industry and is well positioned to house the new project.

Our region has the energy expertise and the existing infrastructure to support the expansion of wind opportunities while powering our country, Fletcher said in a statement. As an advocate for an all-of-the-above strategy for energy investment, I welcome this proposal and look forward to partnering with the Administration to create new jobs and to ensure our region and our country continue to lead the transition to a lower-carbon world.

Disclosure: Rice University has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

When you join us at The Texas Tribune Festival Sept. 22-24 in downtown Austin, youll hear from changemakers who are driving innovation, lawmakers who are taking charge with new policies, industry leaders who are pushing Texas forward and so many others. See the growing speaker list and buy tickets.

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FACT SHEET: President Bidens Executive Actions on Climate to Address Extreme Heat and Boost Offshore Wind – The White House

Posted: at 1:12 pm

New Actions to Accelerate Clean Energy, Create Jobs, and Lower Costs

Today, President Biden will reiterate that climate change is a clear and present danger to the United States. Since Congress is not acting on this emergency, President Biden will. In the coming weeks, President Biden will announce additional executive actions to combat this emergency.

Today, President Biden is announcing his latest set of executive actions to turn the climate crisis into an opportunity, by creating good-paying jobs in clean energy and lowering costs for families. His actions will protect communities from climate impacts already here, including extreme heat conditions impacting more than 100 million Americans this week, and expand offshore wind opportunities and jobs in the United States.

The President will make the announcements at a former coal-fired power plant in Brayton Point, Massachusetts that will host a cable manufacturing facility to support the flourishing offshore wind industry representing how the Presidents leadership is accelerating the nations transition away from the pollution, environmental injustice, and volatile price swings of the past toward the good-paying jobs and energy security of the future.

President Bidens new executive actions will:

Millions of Americans feel the effects of climate change each year when their roads wash out, power goes down, homes are destroyed by wildfires, or schools get flooded. Last year alone, the United States faced 20 extreme weather and climate related disaster events with losses exceeding $1 billion each a cumulative price tag of more than $145 billion. People of color and underserved communities are disproportionately vulnerable to the climate crisis and are more likely to experience the negative health and environmental effects of climate-related and extreme weather events. Further, the countrys critical infrastructure is at risk from climate and extreme weather.

President Biden will not back down from addressing this emergency. Since taking office, he has mobilized his entire Administration to tackle the climate crisis and secured historic clean energy and climate resilience investments in his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. He will continue taking bold action to secure a safe, healthy, clean energy futureall while saving families money, delivering clean air and water, advancing environmental justice, and boosting American manufacturing and competitiveness.

PROTECTING COMMUNITIES FROM EXTREME HEAT

This summer, millions of Americans are navigating the challenges and dangers that come with extreme heat advisories and record-breaking temperatures exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The climate crisis is making heat waves more intense and frequent, taking a toll on health across the countrysending tens of thousands of Americans to the emergency room, increasing risks of heart and respiratory problems, and especially endangering our workers, children, seniors, historically underserved and overburdened communities, and people with underlying health conditions.

To respond, last year the Biden-Harris Administration launched a broad set of new initiatives to advance workplace safety, build local resilience, and address the disproportionate impacts of extreme heat. Today, the Administration is announcing additional steps and progress on:

Through the Extreme Heat Interagency Working Group under the National Climate Task Force, the Administration is advancing a wide range of additional efforts, including a historic OSHA rulemaking process toward the first federal heat standard to protect workers, EPA support for community communication strategies to help people keep safe on the hottest days, a DHS Cooling Solutions Challenge to fund innovative extreme heat responses, NOAAs community-led urban heat island mapping campaign, a USDA urban and community forestry program to equitably improve heat resilience, and a new HHS Climate and Health Outlook to inform health professionals about extreme heat and other climate-related health hazards.

BOOSTING THE OFFSHORE WIND INDUSTRY AND CREATING JOBS

Since President Biden set a bold goal of deploying 30 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030, the Administration has approved the first large-scale projects and new wind energy areas, held record-breaking wind auctions, and issued an action plan to accelerate permitting. The private sector is following suit with investments to expand an American-made wind energy supply chain. In 2021 alone, investors announced $2.2 billion in new supply chain funding, including commitments to develop nine major manufacturing facilities to produce the foundations, towers, cables, and blades of offshore wind turbines. Historic project labor agreements are helping to grow a diverse union workforce, create good-paying jobs, and support training programs.

To further expand these opportunities, today President Biden is:

These actions follow the Presidents announcement last month of a new Federal-State Offshore Wind Implementation Partnership, joining with Governors to ensure that federal and state officials are working together to build a U.S.-based supply chain, including manufacturing and shipbuilding, for the rapidly-growing offshore wind industry.

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Unleashing the economic power and reliability potential of West Coast offshore wind – Utility Dive

Posted: at 1:12 pm

This opinion piece is part of a series from Energy Innovations policy experts on advancing an affordable, resilient and clean energy system. It was written by Mike OBoyle, director of electricity policy, and Michelle Solomon, policy analyst.

The West Coast is known for vast renewable energy potential: solar in California and hydropower in the Pacific Northwest. But its long coastline offers an untapped clean energy resource with massive potential for states and the nation offshore wind.

Achieving President Bidens goal of 100%clean power nationwide by 2035 is possible with only onshore resources. The same is true for California, Oregon and Washingtons ambitious clean energy goals. But land use, siting and permitting challenges mean scaling up offshore wind greatly increases their likelihood of success. Tapping this potential would also bolster grid reliability and create jobs.

Unfortunately, the United States lacks offshore wind ambition, particularly along the West Coast, where no established deployment targets exist. East Coast states, in contrast, are targeting more than 30,000 megawatts of capacity by 2035. And while President Biden announced a national goal of 30,000 MW by 2030, he has not designated a specific West Coast target.

West Coast offshore wind is enjoying promising tailwinds. Californias AB 525 directs the California Energy Commission to set planning goals through 2045, and Oregons HB 3375 requires its Department of Energy to identify benefits and challenges of 3,000 MW of offshore wind by 2030.

The U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has also designated call areas off the California and Oregon coasts and begun an environmental assessment, with conditional approval by the California Coastal Commission. BOEM also announced a proposed sale notice for two wind energy areas in California, with an estimated potential of 4,500 MW.

This is a good start, but much more is needed to develop West Coast wind and accelerate the transition to a reliable clean grid. Federal tax credits can help floating wind technology achieve commercial scale with cost reductions similar to onshore wind and solar technologies. Funding for port upgrades and transmission along with policies to accelerate the pace of leasing, siting and permitting will speed development.

Combined with state action to incorporate offshore wind into planning and procurement, these federal policies can move floating turbines from a niche resource to a core strategy for cleaning the grid.

Fixed bottom offshore wind is taking off, with 55,000 MW deployed worldwide. But this technology is infeasible on the West Coast due to much deeper waters. Developing offshore wind in these deeper waters requires floating turbines affixed to the seabed with long cables.

Floating offshore wind technology has a key advantage over onshore wind: size. Todays largest offshore turbines total 15 MW capacity, capable of powering about 20,000 households, and 18 MW turbines are expected soon, compared to 3-6 MW for onshore turbines. It also has an environmental advantage eliminating noisy pile driving for fixed bottom foundations is less disruptive for migrating marine mammals and other wildlife.

While floating turbine technology is mature, it is not as commercially widespread as fixed bottom turbines. Policy is needed to scale floating turbines in the U.S., but researchers expect floating and fixed offshore wind costs will converge in the long-term due to technological similarities.

Successful demonstration projects have spurred major floating wind contracts, including 5,000 MW off Scotlands coast. More than 25,000 MW of floating offshore wind projects are in the global pipeline, and 3,600 MW will come online in the next five years.

The U.S. electricity grid must be 70% to 80%clean by 2030 to achieve the countrys Paris Agreement goals. Given our current grid size, the U.S. could get there with onshore wind, solar and batteries. However, to reach net-zero emissions and support growing electrification, the grid must expand to add more diverse clean resources, all while overcoming land use constraints.

Offshore wind can be a crucial part of this diverse clean portfolio. A recent working paper from the University of California, Berkeley, shows West Coast offshore wind would deliver power when the Western grid needs it most in the early evening as the sun goes down with more consistency due to stronger ocean winds and larger turbines. The consistency and complementary nature of offshore wind power would enhance reliability, which will prove even more critical for an increasingly climate-stressed grid.

Tapping offshore winds potential would create new clean energy jobs and reinvigorate port communities. The University of Southern Californias Schwarzenegger Institute estimates 10,000 MW of California offshore wind development would create 120,000 to 180,000 job-years, including 4,000 permanent operations and maintenance jobs by 2040. Policies to support local component manufacturing, could create up to 50,000 additional job-years through 2040.

Floating turbine development could also revive historic deep-water port communities. The CEC approved a $10.5 million grant for investments in the Port of Humboldt Bay to support offshore wind. An economic assessment found the terminal could generate as many as 830 local jobs and more than $130 million in industry output over a five-year period. But much larger investments are needed to realize this economic opportunity.

Port upgrades are even more crucial to floating offshore wind compared to fixed bottom turbines, as the floating platforms must be assembled on shore and towed to their designated location. Investment in just a few ports could support installations across hundreds of miles of coastline. This infrastructure spending should happen now to prevent port capacity from becoming a bottleneck.

Offshore floating wind can provide new economic growth and be a much-needed source of reliable clean power for the Western U.S., but the projects are massive and complex. A handful of federal and state policies can work together to speed its commercial deployment.

Congress should extend the floating offshore wind production tax credit for at least 10 to 15 years at $25 per megawatt-hour as a foundational policy that provides certainty to developers, cuts costs,and helps scale this technology.

Congress should also dedicate funding for West Coast port and manufacturing cluster development to support the necessary infrastructure. Tying this funding to strong labor requirements and community benefit agreements can ensure local economies benefit without compromising air quality.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and Congress can both support transmission to connect Western offshore wind with the rest of the Western grid FERC via planning and Congress with funding. An offshore subsea cable linking production along the West Coast would be the least-cost, highest-benefit approach.

The Biden administration can encourage responsible, timely offshore wind siting by accelerating BOEMs leasing process, particularly designating new areas for leasing and study beyond the four currently under consideration. Responsible siting should include funding for collecting and sharing data on offshore winds ecological impacts.

While federal action is necessary for most offshore wind projects due to their placement in federal waters, West Coast states should proactively plan and promote offshore wind to maximize benefits to their residents and grids. States should update offshore wind cost figures based on the state of todays technology and include estimates for five years due to long timelines from decisions to procurement. By incorporating expected cost declines, states can accurately assess the benefits of offshore wind.

West Coast states can also require utilities to include at least one scenario during integrated resource planning that features offshore wind, including quantified resource diversity benefits, to ensure diverse portfolios are considered. Instituting competitive procurement will also allow offshore wind to compete on equal footing with other resources. Finally, an interstate working group on offshore wind and transmission development can assess resiliency benefits of proposals like a subsea transmission link and increase project planning efficiency.

Offshore wind can have significant reliability, economic and climate benefits but policy action is needed now. Coordinated federal and state action can provide financial incentives, prepare for new infrastructure needs, accelerate leasing and permitting, and incorporate offshore wind into state planning and procurement processes. With all West Coast states committed to 100%clean electricity and unmatched offshore wind resources, planning for this technology today will provide smooth sailing tomorrow.

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Floating Offshore Wind Turbine Launched in Spain for Pilot Project – The Maritime Executive

Posted: at 1:12 pm

DemoSATH was floated in Spain ahead of its offshore deployment (photos courtesy of Saitec Offshore Technologies)

PublishedJul 20, 2022 7:39 PM by The Maritime Executive

A project designed to support the development and commercialization of floating offshore wind farms located in deep waters marked a key milestone with the completion and launch of its floating wind turbine. The unit is due to be installed by the end of this summer in a test field that is two miles off the Spanish coast with a sea depth of nearly 280 feet.

The project began nearly two years ago, with Saitec Offshore Technologies and RWE Renewables entering into the partnership to develop the DemoSATH. The 2MW turbine uses the SATH design with a pre-fabrication of concrete components and a single-point-of-mooring system that allows the structure to yaw around its mooring and passively align itself to the wave and current direction.

The prestressed concrete platform was constructed and assembled, and equipped with a 2 MW turbine in Spain before the launching at the Punta Sollana quay in the Port of Bilbao. The DemoSATH unit, which has a rotor diameter of approximately 315 feet, was loaded onto the semisubmersible barges deck using self-propelled modular transporters. The barge was then ballasted down lower into the water until the DemoSATH unit became buoyant, after which it was towed off. According to the companies, it took less than 45 minutes to safely berth the DemoSATH wind turbine at the quay.

DemoSATH in berthed in Bilboa, Spain before being towed to the test site later this summer

This is a great step forward for the DemoSATH project. The load-out and float-off operations were an important milestone to fulfill as they were the first of their kind executed for the SATH floating offshore wind turbine, said Araceli Martnez, Chief of Engineering for Saitec Offshore Technologies. The demonstrator is ready to become the first floating wind turbine to be commissioned to the mainland Spanish grid during the next months.

The project is expected to move forward at a fast pace for its installation later this summer. During the next months, the submarine dynamic cable will be deployed at the installation site and the floater will be towed out to be connected to it, as well as to the mooring lines that were previously installed in late April.

According to RWE, the project holds the potential to unlock the potential of floating wind globally, especially in countries with deeper coastal waters, like the U.S., France, UK, Norway, and Spain. The DemoSATH project will enable the company to gain early experience for future developments. Its innovative concrete-based platform is seen as a key development that once proven can help to expand the potential for deep-water offshore wind farms.

DemoSATH positioned on the dock before the floating operation

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Westwood Sees Five Good Years Ahead for Offshore Oil and Gas – The Maritime Executive

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PublishedJul 21, 2022 11:39 PM by The Maritime Executive

Offshore sector consultancy Westwood Global Energy predicts that there will be good times to come for offshore oil and gas development over the next five years.

2022 is looking like a great year for offshore development, though inflation and supply-chain impacts have tempered expectations somewhat. Offshore EPC contracting activity tripled year-on-year in the first half of 2022, reaching $26 billion, reflecting multiple major new project approvals like Exxon's Yellowtail off Guyana and Equinors Haltenbanken East multi-field complex in the Norwegian Sea. The contracting activity includes eight new/refurbished floating production units, 52 platforms and a total of nearly 900 nautical miles of pipeline.

The second half of 2022 could bring another $46 billion worth of EPC awards - particularly from Saudi Aramco, which is investing heavily in four large offshore projects. Taken together, these contracts would amount to more than $70 billion worth of investment over the full span of 2022 - more than in any year since at least 2014, according to Westwood's data.

The recent period of underinvestment (during COVID) and the return of ultra-high oil prices could boost investment for years to come. Westwood's markety analytic tools predict a long upcycle through 2026, with offshore EPC spending totaling about $275 million over the period. This is more than 70 percent increase over the past five years, which saw a downturn in investment in the sector. The busiest areas of activity will likely be in Asia, the Mideast and Latin America.

The rising tide is also lifting offshore supply vessels and rigs, which are now bringing in the highest day rates in years - a welcome relief after an extended low period and a wave of consolidation. Clarksons' sector-wide offshore index has hit a seven-year high, and OSVs are bringing in 50 percent more per day now than they did at the beginning of 2021. OSV utilization is vastly improved at 68 percent and climbing, and the laid-up offshore vessel fleet - a long-term drag on rates - has fallen below 800 hulls worldwide.

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Kim Heng Unit Inks MoU with Crowley to Support US Offshore Wind Projects – Offshore WIND

Posted: at 1:12 pm

Adira Renewables, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Kim Heng, signed a non-binding Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Crowley Wind Services to cooperate on offshore wind farm cable laying installation projects across the US East Coast.

Under the MoU, Kim Heng will issue updates about material developments and/or the execution of a definitive agreement as and when they occur.

The duration of the contract is one year, with an option to renew it by mutual agreement.

Formed at the beginning of last year, Crowley Wind Services signed several agreements across the US to support the offshore wind market.

Last month, the company signed additional agreements with Denmark-headquartered Esvagt to support purpose-built, Jones Act vessels for the US offshore wind sector.

Crowley Wind Services also decided to expand its capabilities across the clean energy sectors byannouncingthe companys plans to develop and operate a wind services terminal in Salem, Massachusetts to serve the Commonwealth Wind offshore installation and other industry services.

According to last years report from BVG Associates, the US East Coast is expected to have installed more than 40 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2035.

There are several offshore wind projects on the East Coast of the US that are planned to be commissioned by 2035 such as Park City Wind and Vineyard Wind 1, Americas first large-scale offshore wind farm.

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Kim Heng Unit Inks MoU with Crowley to Support US Offshore Wind Projects - Offshore WIND

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