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Global Offshore Wind Industry Poised to Miss Big Targets As Obstacles Mount

Global Offshore Wind Industry Poised to Miss Big Targets as Obstacles Mount

After a year of canceled projects, broken turbines, and abandoned lease sales, the global offshore wind industry no longer has much chance to hit the lofty targets set by governments in the U.S., Europe, and elsewhere, marking a setback for efforts to fight climate change.

The technology forms a big part of government strategies to advance renewable energy and decarbonize the global power industry because it can generate vast amounts of electricity near densely populated coastal regions. Missing targets by a wide margin will leave a gap that could be hard to fill.

Reuters spoke to 12 offshore wind companies, industry researchers, trade associations, and government officials in six countries to come up with a global picture of the state of the industry and its outlook, and found soaring costs, project delays, and limited supply chain investment were hobbling installations.

“We’re pretty far away from these targets,” Soren Lassen, head of offshore wind research at energy research firm Wood Mackenzie, said in an interview. He said offshore wind farms now have a global average cost of $230 per megawatt-hour (MWh) – up 30% to 40% in the past two years and more than triple the average of $75/MWh for onshore facilities.

That has companies retreating. Last month, BP (NYSE: BP) said it was considering selling a stake in its offshore wind business, and earlier this year, Equinor (NYSE: EQNR) abandoned investments in Vietnam, Spain, and Portugal. Meanwhile, GE Vernova (NYSE: GEV), one of the industry’s top turbine suppliers, is not taking new orders.

“We do not foresee adding to (our) backlog without substantially different industry economics than what we see in the marketplace today,” GE Vernova CEO Scott Strazik said on a recent investor call.

World governments had set a global target last year of tripling overall renewable energy use by 2030, something the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) said would require offshore wind capacity to surge to 494 GW by the end of this decade, from 73 GW currently.

IRENA Director-General Francesco La Camera told Reuters offshore wind is now projected to fall short of its target by a third. Three other prominent research firms estimate that the world will not reach 500 GW of offshore wind installations until after 2035.

TRUMP EFFECT

Governments in Europe, the Americas, and Asia have sought to prop up the sector with national targets aimed at attracting deep-pocketed developers including major global energy companies Equinor, Orsted, RWE, and Iberdrola.

For example, the United States set a goal in 2021 of 30 gigawatts of offshore wind by the end of this decade but had less than 200 megawatts operating as of May of this year, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

The outgoing administration of U.S. President Joe Biden issued permits for 15 GW of projects, held six lease sales on multiple coasts, and extended tax credits to the industry.

But U.S. offshore wind has been roiled since last year by canceled projects and contracts, suspended government auctions, and a high-profile construction accident at the country’s first major commercial project

The industry is now worried that Biden’s replacement, President-elect Donald Trump, will follow through on an election campaign promise to dismantle the industry’s progress, possibly by withholding lease auctions.

“Given the results of the U.S. elections, we see higher risks than before for the timely implementation of offshore wind projects there,” Michael Mueller, finance chief of German offshore project developer RWE, told journalists on an earnings call this month.

Energy research firm Rystad said it expects the United States to reach less than half of its 2030 target.

Representatives of the Biden administration and Trump’s transition team did not provide comment for this story.

Carl Fleming, a partner at law firm McDermott Will & Emery who advises the White House on renewable energy policy, told Reuters the U.S. would struggle to miss its target regardless of who is in the White House, given market conditions.

EUROPE ALSO FALLING SHORT

In Europe, Petra Manuel, an offshore wind analyst at Rystad, expects countries with the highest offshore wind targets – the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Netherlands – to reach about 60% to 70% of their goals. Nations with less ambitious targets, including Belgium, Denmark, and Ireland, are also expected to come up short, he said.

Industry trade group WindEurope, meanwhile, said it expects the European Union to have 54 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2030, about half of the 120 GW North Sea countries pledged.

EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson told Reuters that member states have not formally flagged any delays in meeting targets, but they could not rule out potential delays.

Britain, the second-biggest offshore wind market after China, will also miss its goal of 60 GW by 2030, said Damien Zachlod, managing director of offshore wind developer EnBW Generation UK.

The UK held its best-funded auction yet in September, adding 4.9 GW of new agreements. But future auctions will require far larger volumes to reach 60 GW on time, he said.

“It will be very, very challenging and we won’t hit the target by 2030,” he said.

A spokesperson for the UK government did not immediately provide comment.

CHINA BUCKS THE TREND

China, which became the global leader in offshore wind in 2022, is bucking the global trend.

Beijing has supercharged its industry with subsidies and low financing costs. Most of the sector’s players are state-owned and have access to locally-made offshore wind components.

China accounted for more than half of 2023 offshore wind installations, with 6.3 GW, and the Global Wind Energy Council trade group estimates the country will install 11 to 16 GW annually in the next two to three years.

Sourcing cheap equipment from China would help reduce costs for developers in Europe, Japan, and the United States, but governments there have sought to encourage local production to reduce reliance on Beijing.

Elsewhere in Asia, nations including Vietnam, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have sought to expand offshore wind but also face difficulties linked to soaring costs and regulatory uncertainty.

For example, Japan has set ambitions of building up to 45 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2040, up from less than 1 GW today. But the nation’s auctions to date have been small, and the industry is constrained by laws preventing non-Japanese vessels from operating in offshore wind areas.

Rebecca Williams, deputy CEO of the Global Wind Energy Council trade group, acknowledged there is a risk the industry could miss its targets, but said hitting them is still possible with the right policies.

“Of course, whenever there’s a target, there’s a risk that that target might not be met,” Williams said on the sidelines of the COP29 conference in Baku.

“But the target is not the thing that’s going to get the turbines in the water.”