After the first year in which more wind power plant was turning in the waters off Asia than those in Europe, 2023 has quickly begun to look like a time of reckoning in the sector’s historic heartland as it gears up industrialisation plans in cross-winds created by a shape-shifting regional energy crisis and global economic outlook fraught with risks.
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The scale of the ambition in Europe for offshore wind is only growing – as it must for the EU to reach its target of having at least 300GW of turbines turning at sea by 2050. Evidence at both country and company level came this week with the UK sealing 8GW in leases with developers including BP, RWE and TotalEnergies to build projects that will one day power a quarter of British homes, and developer Orsted revealed to Recharge it had applied for permits off Sweden that would take its portfolio there to a massive 18GW – enough to cover more than half of the Nordic country’s total electricity consumption.
Construction of the sprawling supply chain taking shape in the North Sea littoral nations to build these tens of gigawatts of plant moved ahead in step, with Scotland anointing its first two green freeports – coastal industrial hubs that will be construction and service bases for the 26GW fleet being developed out of last year’s market-making ScotWind auction. Industry welcomed the news but cautioned reaching such a lofty build-out target would require the “involvement and support of multiple Scottish ports” not just green freeports.
The green-lit Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week (ADSW) conference was supercharged in the days before doors opened by the declaration by Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber – president-designate of COP28 and CEO of Abu Dhabi oil group Adnoc – to the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Forum that the world is “way off track” in meeting the climate goals set in Paris in 2015.
The Rostock-based OEM managed globally to sufficiently increase the price of its turbines last year to offset an overall order level drop and “strong order intake momentum” in the second half of 2022 identified by CEO José Luis Blanco showed straight away this week with a contract for what is set to be the largest wind farm in the Baltic states, Enefit Green’s 255MW Sopi-Tootsi in Estonia.