Offshore wind construction up 28 percent

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The U.S. offshore wind market ramped up construction activities and saw several new vessels launched in the second quarter of 2024. In total, the U.S. reached 310 MW of installed offshore wind capacity, up 28 percent from last quarter. These and other key industry findings are detailed in Oceantic Network’s U.S. Offshore Wind Quarterly Market Report, which highlights new vessel launches, regulatory advancements for several projects, and state-level developments that drove the U.S. market forward between April and June of 2024.

The Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind Project, Revolution Wind, and Vineyard Wind 1 are undergoing installation activities on the East Coast, with South Fork Wind already complete and delivering power to the grid. Once installation on the three projects is complete, they will provide more than 4 GW of energy to the grid, powering about 1.4 million homes. Also, in Q2, Equinor broke ground on its South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, projected to create more than 1,000 jobs in the construction of staging, pre-assembly, and operations and maintenance facilities for offshore wind. The New Jersey Wind Port, an offshore wind marshalling port, is also nearing completion.

“The U.S. offshore wind industry entered its second summer construction season, even bigger than last year, drawing on dozens of vessels across ports from Virginia to Massachusetts,” said Sam Salustro, vice president of strategic communications at Oceantic Network. “These projects will multiply installed capacity more than 13-fold. The next wave of supply chain and infrastructure development is well underway with new ports breaking ground and shipyards churning out vessels. Americans are at work out on the water, inside U.S. ports, and in factories and shipyards far from project areas.”

Further market strength was showcased in the second quarter with the launch of the first U.S.-built service operations vessel (SOV) for offshore wind, along with the launch of two new crew transfer vessels that mark the fifth and sixth to be delivered in 2024.

“We’re heading for a summer filled with monumental achievement brought by new vessels purpose-built to serve our industry,” Salustro said.

The report identified several further industry advancements, including:

  • The Department of Interior announced a five-year plan for offshore wind leasing, which includes up to 12 potential lease area sales through 2028.
  • The domestic supply chain notched advancements with $300 million in new investments in shipbuilding and manufacturing across Louisiana, Maryland, New York, Ohio, and Texas.
  • More than 4 GW of projects are now undergoing installation activities.
  • New federal approvals increased ready to install capacity to more than 13 GW.

More info oceantic.org/2024-q2-u-s- offshore-wind-quarterly-market-report/