'Really stressful': fears grow that new offshore wind star Poland won't deliver
With major investments already made, there is no sign of regulatory progress over a crucial first CfD tender this year
“Without clear regulation the tender won’t work, and we will miss [the auctioning of] 4GW of offshore wind in 2025,” Janusz Gajowiecki, the president of the Polish wind energy association (PWEA), said on the sidelines of an offshore ports event in Szczecin, adding that the industry is struggling to understand why not even a consultation process on the tendering rules has yet been started.
After the consultation, the amended offshore wind regulation needs to be prepared by Poland’s climate ministry. It then will have to be approved by the cabinet and parliament, even before relevant IT and other mechanisms are put in place by the government agency carrying out the tender.
“We have made an agreement with the European Commission in 2022 and now we have to keep putting pressure on the government to draft this regulation.”
WindEurope deputy CEO Malgosia Bartosik at the same event pointed out that companies have already spent large amounts of money betting on smooth sailing for Poland’s planned 12GW second wave of offshore wind expansion.
Investments include a recent refurbishment of the port of Swinoujsce in northwestern Poland to become an offshore wind installation hub, as well as a Vestas nacelle factory that is just ramping up in nearby Szczecin. Spanish company Windar is also about to start construction on an offshore wind tower factory in Szczecin that is slated to start operations in 2026, with spending slated to exceed €100m.
The industry only knows what will happen in the next two to three years, but not in the longer term, she added.
“This is crucial [not only] for current investment, but also for new investment to come. And it seems the Polish Government has a huge appetite for it.”
“It's a really stressful situation for the Polish industry at the moment,” Gajowiecki added.
PWEA even sees a larger potential and reckons 33GW of wind capacity could be built in the Polish part of the Baltic Sea by 2040.
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