A record 3.6 gigawatts of new offshore wind capacity was added across Europe in 2019, but the pace of deployment is still too slow to reach Europe’s ambitious climate targets, according to new industry figures published on Thursday (6 February).

Ten new offshore wind farms came online last year, bringing the total to 22 GW, according to figures published by WindEurope, a trade association.

The UK accounted for nearly half of the newly-installed capacity, with 1.7 GW, according to WindEurope. Second came Germany (1.1 GW), followed by Denmark (374 MW) and Belgium (370 MW). Portugal was next with 8 MW of newly installed floating offshore wind.

World’s second floating wind farm sets sail for Portugal The first turbine from the WindFloat Atlantic project was successfully towed from Ferrol, Spain, towards its destination 20 km off the coast of Viana do Castelo in Portugal on Saturday (19 October), in what constitutes a world second for floating wind.

The good news is that costs of new offshore wind farms continued to fall significantly, according to industry figures. Last year’s auctions – in the UK, France and the Netherlands – delivered prices for consumers in the range of €40-50/MWh, WindEurope said.

“Europe really embraced offshore wind in 2019,” said Giles Dickson, CEO of WindEurope. “Auction prices showed it’s now cheaper to build offshore wind than new gas or coal plants,” he pointed out.

And the project pipeline keeps filling up. “This time last year we were looking at 76 GW by 2030. Now it’s 100 GW,” Dickson said.

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So all is for the best, then? Not quite. In spite of solid growth, new offshore wind projects are falling short of what’s needed to meet the EU’s climate targets for 2030. And they are far behind the pace required to keep up with Europe’s long-term climate neutrality objective for 2050.

The European Commission says Europe needs between 230 and 450 GW of offshore wind by 2050 to decarbonise the energy system and deliver on the objectives of the Green Deal, WindEurope points out. This, it adds, requires building 7 GW of new offshore wind a year by 2030, and ramping up to 18 GW a year by 2050.

“But the current level of new installations and investments is a long way behind that,” WindEurope warned. “We’re not currently building enough to deliver on that, let alone the more ambitious volumes needed to deliver the Green Deal,” Dickson said in reference to the 2050 carbon neutrality objective.

Those concerns are shared by Eurelectric, the EU power sector association. “Manufacturing more wind turbines is not an issue, you can ramp up production pretty fast,” said Kristian Ruby, Eurelectric secretary-general.

“The problem is installing the grids that go along with them, getting the permits and the buy-in of local populations to this additional capacity. This is where the challenges are,” he told EURACTIV.

Deployment of wind energy in Europe faces obstacles, mainly related to slow permitting procedures and resistance from local populations. The European Commission said it will address them in a new “offshore wind strategy” due to be presented before the end of the year.

Germany seeks to jolt its stalled wind industry with new offshore plan Germany’s wind sector is barely growing any more. To achieve its self-imposed 65% target for renewables, Germany has made the promise, for the first time, to heavily expand its offshore wind farms. EURACTIV Germany reports.

EU offshore wind strategy

In January, EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson said the new strategy will address challenges linked to the large-scale development of offshore wind and ocean energy, “such as impact on energy grids and markets, management of maritime space and industrial policy dimensions”.

Dickson called on the new strategy to “map out clearly how to mobilise the investments needed” to reach 450 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2050. “Crucially, it should provide a masterplan (a) to develop the offshore and onshore grid connections and (b) to get the maritime spatial planning right,” Dickson said.

Achieving that will also require “ever closer cooperation” between governments in the North Sea and the Baltic, WindEurope argues, calling for the cooperation to be extended to the UK after Brexit.

Britain represented “half of Europe’s investment in offshore wind in the last decade and will remain by far the biggest market” in Europe, Dickson pointed out.

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[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic]