Biden’s offshore wind target slipping out of reach as projects struggle
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[September 15, 2023]
By Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden’s goal to deploy 30,000 megawatts of
offshore wind along U.S. coastlines this decade to fight climate change
may be unattainable due to soaring costs and supply chain delays,
according to forecasters and industry insiders.
The 2030 target, unveiled shortly after Biden took office, is central to
Biden's broader plan to decarbonize the U.S. economy by 2050. It is also
crucial to targets of Northeast states hoping wind will help them move
away from fossil fuel-fired electricity.
"It doesn't mean that there can't still be excellent progress towards
this technology that's going to do great things for our nation," said
Kris Ohleth, director of the Special Initiative on Offshore Wind, an
independent organization that provides guidance and research to the
industry.
"It's just not going to be by that size by 2030. It's pretty clear at
this point."
In recent months soaring materials costs, high interest rates and supply
chain delays have led project developers including Orsted, Equinor, BP,
Avangrid and Shell to cancel or seek to renegotiate power contracts for
the first commercial-scale U.S. wind farms with operating start dates
between 2025 and 2028.
Companies say they remain committed to the projects, which have a
combined capacity of more than 6,000 megawatts. Yet delays have resulted
from the need to strike new contracts and secure specialized equipment
in demand all over the world.
"The U.S. will not reach the 30 GW by 2030 target," Samantha Woodworth,
North American wind analyst at Wood Mackenzie said in an email, citing
"recent upheaval." The energy research firm expects 21 GW of offshore
wind along U.S. shores in 2030, breaking 30 GW by 2032.
Developers began raising doubts this summer.
"Thirty gigawatts is now unfortunately not something that the developers
are really aspiring to," Michael Brown, U.S. country manager for Ocean
Winds, an offshore wind joint venture between France's ENGIE and
Portugal's EDP Renovaveis, said at a Reuters Events conference in July.
"We want to meet as high a gigawatt target as possible, but it's not
going to be possible to meet those 30 GW."
Ocean Winds spokesperson Kelly Penot-Rousseau would not comment this
week on Brown's remarks. But in the two months since he spoke, the U.S.
industry has suffered a string of additional blows.
Last month, an Ocean Winds-Shell project, SouthCoast Wind, agreed to pay
$60 million to cancel contracts with Massachusetts utilities.
The same week, Orsted warned it could see impairments of $2.3 billion on
three U.S. projects and the industry largely failed to show up for a
Biden administration sale of offshore wind leases in the Gulf of Mexico.
White House spokesperson Michael Kikukawa said the administration "is
using every legally available tool to advance American offshore wind
opportunities and achieve the goal of 30 GW by 2030." He noted industry
investments have increased by $7.7 billion since Biden last year signed
the Inflation Reduction Act, containing tax credits for clean energy.
Still, offshore wind developers including Orsted have said the IRA’s
subsidies are insufficient for projects to thrive in the current
environment, and are lobbying the administration for additional
concessions.
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A crane hangs over the first jacket support structure installed to
support a turbine for a wind farm in the waters of the Atlantic
Ocean off Block Island, Rhode Island July 27, 2015. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
STATESIDE SETBACK
Installing 30 GW of offshore wind by 2030, enough to power 10
million American homes, was an aggressive goal that sparked
confidence in the market that the U.S. was serious about offshore
wind after years of lagging Europe and Asia.
The nation currently has just two pilot-scale offshore wind farms
capable of producing 42 megawatts of electricity.
In a U.S. Department of Energy report in 2022, just one of two
independent forecasts predicted the U.S. would have at least 30 GW
of offshore wind by 2030. In this year's report, published last
month, 2030 forecasts by market research firms 4C Offshore and
BloombergNEF were ratcheted down to 26.6 GW and 23.3 GW,
respectively.
Those levels lag installation forecasts for nations like China and
the United Kingdom over the next decade, according to the DOE
report.
DOE spokesperson Samah Shaiq said the 2030 goal "is still within
striking distance" and the speed of development would depend on
regulatory efficiency, availability of vessels and port
infrastructure, grid planning and new turbine technology.
The administration is working on initiatives to address those
issues, Shaiq added.
Northeastern states such as Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York
need wind power to meet ambitious targets. New York, for example,
has a goal to power its grid with 70% renewable energy by 2030.
“The real reason that the Biden administration could set 2030
objectives for offshore wind is because of the U.S. northeastern
states," said Doreen Harris, president of the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), which is implementing
the state's offshore wind mandate of 9 GW by 2035.
NYSERDA warned the state's utility regulator last month that delays
in deploying offshore wind could threaten that target and asked the
New York State Department of Public Service to approve price
increases to contracts with Equinor, BP and Orsted.
Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources Commissioner Elizabeth
Mahony said she was confident in the future of offshore wind. The
state has a target of procuring 5.6 GW of offshore wind contracts by
2027, with 2.8 GW in operation by 2030, according to the Executive
Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.A spokesperson for the
New Jersey Board of Public Utilities said the state was moving
forward with solicitations to reach the state's goal of 11 GW of
offshore wind by 2040.
Stephanie McClellan, executive director of the offshore wind
advocacy group Turn Forward, said making sure the first fleet of
projects succeeds was more important than a particular timeline.
"That's where the attention needs to be placed," she said. "Not
what's going to happen in 2030."
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by David Gregorio)
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