Delaware | Will 'First State' finally get onboard now that US offshore wind is leaving harbour?

Following the failed flagship Bluewater project in the 2000s, offshore wind sector progress in Delaware stalled, but a new think-tank study concludes now is the moment to make up for lost time, writes Tim Ferry

Dominion Energy's CVOW pilot project off Virginia
Dominion Energy's CVOW pilot project off VirginiaFoto: Dominion
Plans are accelerating to develop the offshore wind sector now emerging along the US eastern seaboard, with states from North Carolina to Maine having set goals for a total of more than 40GW of plant to be operation by 2040, 16GW of which has already been assigned through offtake contract.
But one state in the region stands apart. Delaware, though the earliest mover in the US Atlantic play with the ill-fated Bluewater Wind project that ran aground in the late-2000s, has so far forgone participation in an industry that its own university predicts could generate $109bn in economic activity by the end of the decade.

A new study from the University of Delaware's (UD) Special Initiative on Offshore Wind ~(SIOW) think-tank, however, found that the risk profile - and economic development opportunity - have changed dramatically since the 450MW flagship foundered under the weight of a combination of costly economics and unfavourable public perception.

The latest SIOW research indicates that with offshore wind's levellised cost of energy (LCOE) having fallen precipitously in the last decade to the point where sea-based projects off the US could produce at $56-$86/MWh.

This together with a “better understanding” of auction strategy from Delaware policy-makers, said Willet Kempton, a UD professor and technical advisor to the SIOW, could net LCOEs of $71/MWh, well within the $53-$82MWh range that it currently pays for natural gas generation.

Offshore wind costs have dropped to “half of what they had been” when Bluewater Wind’s power purchase agreement (PPA) was signed in 2008, said Kempton, referring to Delaware’s conclusion that year that “offshore wind [was] too expensive, [and the state] didn't want to pay that much money for electricity.

“If you look at the market price, that was correct at that time,” he added. “It's no longer true to say offshore wind is going to be more expensive [than conventional energy], and we have guidance on how to do it.”

The SIOW report outlines a range of scale-up-focused recommendations designed to minimise costs and maximise investment should Delaware commit to development of its offshore wind resource.

“Bigger projects, bigger turbines, and a better understanding of how to do procurements” are key to cost-competitive offshore wind power, Kempton underscored, as well as “having a robust competition on price”. SIOW's calculus makes the case for 800MW-plus projects deploying 15MW-or-larger turbines, integrated with a well-crafted procurement strategy attractive to multiple developers and tailored to meet the state’s needs.

The report noted that different states have prioritised different elements of the industry, with some, including New York and Maryland, emphasising investment into local supply chain and port infrastructure, while others, such as Massachusetts, putting the accent on LCOE, and provides a range of scenarios for Delaware to weigh as it considers any offshore wind build-out.

Though Kempton believes that a specific legal mandate to procure offshore wind power is unnecessary give its increasingly favourable economics, but a critical first step is for the state to amend power purchase rules that currently allow for only three-year timeframes, instead of the 20-year PPAs needed by the offshore wind industry to defray high upfront development costs.

Key to this endeavour, said Kempton, is finding the offshore acreage on which to build the gigawatts of plant to come, as all nearby lease areas off Delaware's coast, are taken by Virginia and Maryland – including Orsted’s Skipjack project being developed on Bluewater’s former leaseholding while the vast tracts recently auctioned in the New York Bight are too distant.
This leaves leasing acreage in the Central Atlantic an enormous region that the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the federal regulator of development on the outer continental shelf, has earmarked for future development as the US ramps up leasing to meet the Biden administration’s goal of 30GW of plant capacity by 2030.

Delaware, with a population of only 1 million, noted Kempton, could make the transition from a fossil-fuelled energy system to a renewables-fed one off the back of a single utility-scale offshore wind farm and help address climate change challenges linked to it being the lowest-lying state in the nation and so most vulnerable global heating-caused sea-level rise.

“[Offshore wind] makes sense because there’s not any premium on market costs, Delaware is very vulnerable to climate change and would benefit from the industrial development that comes along with it,” he said.

Kempton noted that the study, while not commissioned by the state, was conducted with the approval of its legislature and reflects the new renewable portfolio standard signed into law last year that calls for 40% of renewable power in the generation mix by 2035.

Delaware – known as ‘The First State’ to reflect its distinction of being the first signatory of the US constitution – pioneered offshore wind in the US north-east, until a deal between state utility Delmarva Power and Bluewater fell apart despite having a PPA in place, while neighbouring states Maryland and Virginia launched ambitious sector development programmes and have overtaken it at the fore of the regional sector.
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Published 22 April 2022, 19:55Updated 24 April 2022, 22:30
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