Offshore Why analysts say President Biden will fall short of offshore wind goals John Engel 8.6.2021 Share (The proposed offshore wind project could generate up to 1,300 megawatts of renewable energy and power nearly 600,000 homes. ) Massive investment in offshore wind is expected to drive capacity to 21 gigawatts by 2030, according to a report by IHS Markit, compared to the current capacity of 42 megawatts. But analysts say the industry is still likely to fall 30% short of President Biden’s 2030 goals. The Biden administration set a goal of reaching 30GW offshore wind capacity by 2030 – a milestone authors from the Clean Energy Technology service say the White House is “almost certain” to miss. IHS Markit expects $100 billion to be invested in the offshore wind industry over the next nine years, resulting in the U.S. market share of global capacity increasing from (nearly) 0% to 9%. Read more: Biden administration advances offshore wind energy plans in California, North Carolina “Complex and lengthy permitting processes combined with a lack of manufacturing facilities, specialized U.S.-flagged installation and service vessels, dedicated ports plus poor power transmission infrastructure continue to be the key bottlenecks hampering more rapid growth of the U.S. offshore wind capacity,” IHS Markit analysts wrote. New: @uswindinc announced plans for up to 1,200 MW additional offshore wind energy at its Maryland project, enough to meet the state's offshore wind energy goals. Gov. @LarryHogan called the announcement "game-changing." https://t.co/iirtk0DYCI #renewableenergy @REWorld— John Engel (@EngelsAngle) August 4, 2021 Analysts noted additional challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and high costs for offshore wind projects compared to other carbon-free generation sources. “Current unsubsidized costs for bottom-fixed and floating offshore wind projects are estimated at $125 per MWh and $225 per MWh respectively, well above wholesale electricity prices and costs for both onshore wind and solar PV.” The report does, however, signal that permitting speeds and project costs will improve in the coming years. The Dept. of Energy’s planned $3 billion in public financing for offshore projects and an extension to the 30% investment tax credit should also encourage growth for the industry. Related Posts EIA: Solar and wind to lead U.S. generation growth for next two years NREL scenarios project huge growth in solar/wind, lower emissions, more tax credits Eversource to record up to $1.6 billion after-tax impairment charge amid divestment effort Gone with the wind? Tracking sunken U.S. offshore wind projects