Offshore wind power


Offshore wind power or offshore wind energy is the use of wind farms constructed in bodies of water, usually in the ocean, to harvest wind energy to generate electricity. Higher wind speeds are available offshore compared to on land, so offshore wind power’s electricity generation is higher per amount of capacity installed, and NIMBY opposition to construction is usually much weaker.
Unlike the typical use of the term "offshore" in the marine industry, offshore wind power includes inshore water areas such as lakes, fjords and sheltered coastal areas as well as deeper-water areas. Most offshore wind farms employ fixed-foundation wind turbines in relatively shallow water. As of 2020, floating wind turbines for deeper waters are in the early phase of development and deployment.
At the end of 2018, the total worldwide offshore wind power capacity was 23.1 gigawatt.
All the largest offshore wind farms are currently in northern Europe, especially in the United Kingdom and Germany, which together account for over two-thirds of the total offshore wind power installed worldwide. As of September 2018, the 659 MW Walney Extension in the United Kingdom is the largest offshore wind farm in the world.
The Hornsea Wind Farm under construction in the United Kingdom will become the largest when completed, at 1,200 MW.
Other projects are in the planning stage, including Dogger Bank in the United Kingdom at 4.8 GW, and Greater Changhua in Taiwan at 2.4 GW.
The cost of offshore wind power has historically been higher than that of onshore wind generation, but costs have been decreasing rapidly in recent years to $78/MWh in 2019. Offshore wind power in Europe has been price-competitive with conventional power sources since 2017. Offshore wind generation grew at over 30 percent per year in the 2010s. As of 2020, offshore wind power has become a significant part of northern Europe power generation, though it remained less than 1 percent of overall world electricity generation.

History

Capacity

Europe is the world leader in offshore wind power, with the first offshore wind farm being installed in Denmark in 1991.
In 2009, the average nameplate capacity of an offshore wind turbine in Europe was about 3 MW, and the capacity of future turbines was expected to increase to 5 MW.
A 2013 comprehensive review of the engineering aspects of turbines like the sizes used onshore, including the electrical connections and converters, considered that the industry had in general been overoptimistic about the benefits-to-costs ratio and concluded that the "offshore wind market doesn’t look as if it is going to be big".
In 2013, offshore wind power contributed to 1,567 MW of the total 11,159 MW of wind power capacity constructed that year.
By January 2014, 69 offshore wind farms had been constructed in Europe with an average annual rated capacity of 482 MW.
The total installed capacity of offshore wind farms in European waters reached 6,562 MW.
The United Kingdom had by far the largest capacity with 3,681 MW.
Denmark was second with 1,271 MW installed and Belgium was third with 571 MW.
Germany came fourth with 520 MW, followed by the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Ireland, Spain, Norway and Portugal.
At the end of 2015, 3,230 turbines at 84 offshore wind farms across 11 European countries had been installed and grid-connected, making a total capacity of 11,027 MW.
Outside of Europe, the Chinese government had set ambitious targets of 5 GW of installed offshore wind capacity by 2015 and 30 GW by 2020 that would eclipse capacity in other countries.
However, in May 2014 the capacity of offshore wind power in China was only 565 MW.
Offshore capacity in China increased by 832 MW in 2016, of which 636 MW were made in China.
The offshore wind construction market remains quite concentrated.
By the end of 2015, Siemens Wind Power had installed 63% of the world's 11 GW offshore wind power capacity; Vestas had 19%, Senvion came third with 8% and Adwen 6%.
About 12 GW of offshore wind power capacity was operational, mainly in Northern Europe, with 3,755 MW of that coming online during 2015. As of 2020 90% of the offshore global market was represented by European companies.
By 2017, the installed offshore wind power capacity worldwide was 20 GW. In 2018, offshore wind provided just 0.3% of the global electricity supply. Nevertheless, just in 2018 an additional amount of 4.3 GW of offshore wind capacity was employed on a worldwide scale. In Denmark, 50% of the electricity was supplied by wind energy in 2018 out of which 15% was offshore.

Costs

In 2010, the US Energy Information Agency said "offshore wind power is the most expensive energy generating technology being considered for large scale deployment".
The 2010 state of offshore wind power presented economic challenges significantly greater than onshore systems, with prices in the range of 2.5-3.0 million Euro/MW.
That year, Siemens and Vestas were turbine suppliers for 90% of offshore wind power, while Ørsted A/S, Vattenfall and E.on were the leading offshore operators.
In 2011, Ørsted estimated that while offshore wind turbines were not yet competitive with fossil fuels, they would be in 15 years.
Until then, state funding and pension funds would be needed.
At the end of 2011, there were 53 European offshore wind farms in waters off Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom, with an operating capacity of 3,813 MW, while 5,603 MW was under construction.
Offshore wind farms worth €8.5 billion were under construction in European waters in 2011.
In 2012, Bloomberg estimated that energy from offshore wind turbines cost per MWh.
Costs of offshore wind power are decreasing much faster than expected.
By 2016, four contracts were already below the lowest of the predicted 2050 prices.

Future development

Projections for 2020 estimate an offshore wind farm capacity of 40 GW in European waters, which would provide 4% of the European Union's demand of electricity.
The European Wind Energy Association has set a target of 40 GW installed by 2020 and 150 GW by 2030.
Offshore wind power capacity is expected to reach a total of 75 GW worldwide by 2020, with significant contributions from China and the United States.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development predicted in 2016 that offshore wind power will grow to 8% of ocean economy by 2030, and that its industry will employ 435,000 people, adding $230 billion of value.
The European Commission expects that offshore wind energy will be of increasing importance in the future, as offshore wind is part of its Green Deal. The development of the full potential of Europe’s offshore wind energy is one of the key actions in the Clean Energy section of the Green Deal.
By 2050, the expectation is that the installed offshore wind power capacity will reach 1550 GW on a worldwide scale. Compared to the capacity of 2017 that corresponds to an 80-fold increase.
One of the advancements that characterises the current development within the offshore industry are technologies that allow for offshore wind projects further off the shore where wind availability is higher. In particular, the adoption of floating foundation technologies has proved to be a promising technology for unlocking the wind potential on deeper waters.

Types of offshore wind turbines

Fixed foundation offshore wind turbines

Almost all currently operating offshore wind farms employ fixed foundation turbines, with the exception of a few pilot projects.
Fixed foundation offshore wind turbines have fixed foundations underwater, and are installed in relatively shallow waters of up to 50–60 m.
Types of underwater structures include monopile, tripod, and jacketed, with various foundations at the sea floor including monopile or multiple piles, gravity base, and caissons.
Offshore turbines require different types of bases for stability, according to the depth of water.
To date a number of different solutions exist:
Monopiles up to 11 m diameter at 2,000 tonnes can be made, but the largest so far are 1,300 tons which is below the 1,500 tonnes limit of some crane vessels.
The other turbine components are much smaller.
The tripod pile substructure system is a new concept developed to reach deeper waters than with the shallow water systems, up to 60 m. This technology consists of three monopiles linked together through a joint piece at the top. The main advantage of this solution is the simplicity of the installation, which is done by installing three monopiles and then adding the upper joint.
Tripod is an innovative concept that consists on a central pipe that lies on a tripod tubular frame configuration at its bottom part. This uses three small seabed driven piles at each leg of the tripod to link it to the seabed. The main advantage of the tripod system is that it has a larger base, which decreases its risk of getting overturned. Due to the large dimensions the installation process is more difficult and increases the cost.
A steel jacket structure comes from an adaptation to the offshore wind industry of concepts that have been in use in the oil and gas industry for decades. Their main advantage lies in the possibility of reaching higher depths. Their main limitations are due to the high construction and installation costs.

Floating offshore wind turbines

For locations with depths over about 60–80 m, fixed foundations are uneconomical or technically unfeasible, and floating wind turbine anchored to the ocean floor are needed. Blue H Technologies installed the world's first floating wind turbine in 2007.
Hywind is the world's first full-scale floating wind turbine, installed in the North Sea off Norway in 2009.
Hywind Scotland, commissioned in October 2017, is the first operational floating wind farm, with a capacity of 30 MW.
Other kinds of floating turbines have been deployed, and more projects are planned.

Vertical axis offshore wind turbines

Although the great majority of onshore and all large-scale offshore wind turbines currently installed are horizontal axis, vertical axis wind turbines have been proposed for use in offshore installations.
Thanks to the installation offshore and their lower center of gravity, these turbines can in principle be built bigger than horizontal axis turbines, with proposed designs of up to 20 MW capacity per turbine.
This could improve the economy of scale of offshore wind farms.
However, there are no current large-scale demonstrations of this technology.

Economics

The advantage of locating wind turbines offshore is that the wind is much stronger off the coasts, and unlike wind over land, offshore breezes can be strong in the afternoon, matching the time when people are using the most electricity. Offshore turbines can also be located close to the load centers along the coasts, such as large cities, eliminating the need for new long-distance transmission lines.
However, there are several disadvantages of offshore installations, related to more expensive installation, difficulty of access, and harsher conditions for the units.
Locating wind turbines offshore exposes the units to high humidity, salt water and salt water spray which negatively affect service life, cause corrosion and oxidation, increase maintenance and repair costs and in general make every aspect of installation and operation much more difficult, time-consuming, more dangerous and far more expensive than sites on land.
The humidity and temperature is controlled by air conditioning the sealed nacelle.
Sustained high-speed operation and generation also increases wear, maintenance and repair requirements proportionally.
The cost of the turbine represents just one third to one half of total costs in offshore projects today, the rest comes from infrastructure, maintenance, and oversight.
Costs for foundations, installation, electrical connections and operation and maintenance are a large share of the total for offshore installations compared to onshore wind farms.
The cost of installation and electrical connection also increases rapidly with distance from shore and water depth.
Other limitations of offshore wind power are related to the still limited number of installations.
The offshore wind industry is not yet fully industrialized, as supply bottlenecks still exist as of 2017.

Investment costs

Offshore wind farms tend to have larger turbines when compared to onshore installations, and the trend is towards a continued increase in size.
Economics of offshore wind farms tend to favor larger turbines, as installation and grid connection costs decrease per unit energy produced.
Moreover, offshore wind farms do not have the same restriction in size of onshore wind turbines, such as availability of land or transportation requirements.

Operating costs

Operational expenditures for wind farms are split between Maintenance, Port Activities, Operation, License Fees, and Miscellaneous Costs.
Operation and maintenance costs typically represent 53% of operational expenditures, and 25% - 30% of the total lifecycle costs for offshore wind farms. O&Ms are considered one of the major barriers for further development of this resource.
Maintenance of offshore wind farms is much more expensive than for onshore installations.
For example, a single technician in a pickup truck can quickly, easily and safely access turbines on land in almost any weather conditions, exit his or her vehicle and simply walk over to and into the turbine tower to gain access to the entire unit within minutes of arriving onsite.
Similar access to offshore turbines involves driving to a dock or pier, loading necessary tools and supplies into boat, a voyage to the wind turbine, securing the boat to the turbine structure, transferring tools and supplies to and from boat to turbine and turbine to boat and performing the rest of the steps in reverse order.
In addition to standard safety gear such as a hardhat, gloves and safety glasses, an offshore turbine technician may be required to wear a life vest, waterproof or water-resistant clothing and perhaps even a survival suit if working, sea and atmospheric conditions make rapid rescue in case of a fall into the water unlikely or impossible.
Typically at least two technicians skilled and trained in operating and handling large power boats at sea are required for tasks that one technician with a driver's license can perform on land in a fraction of the time at a fraction of the cost.

Cost of energy

Cost for installed offshore turbines fell 30% to $78/MWh in 2019, a more rapid drop than other types of renewable energy.
It has been suggested that innovation at scale could deliver 25% cost reduction in offshore wind by 2020.
Offshore wind power market plays an important role in achieving the renewable target in most of the countries around the world.
Auctions in 2016 for future projects have reached costs of €54.5 per megawatt hour at the 700 MW Borssele 3&4 due to government tender and size, and €49.90 per MWh at the 600 MW Kriegers Flak.
In September 2017 contracts were awarded in the United Kingdom for a strike price of £57.50 per MWh making the price cheaper than nuclear and competitive with gas.
In September 2018 contracts were awarded for Vineyard Wind, Massachusetts, USA at a cost of between $65-$74 per MWh.

Offshore wind resources

Offshore wind resources are by their nature both huge in scale and highly dispersed, considering the ratio of the planet’s surface area that is covered by oceans and seas compared to land mass. Wind speeds offshore are known to be considerably higher than for the equivalent location onshore due to the absence of land mass obstacles and the lower surface roughness of water compared to land features such as forests and savannah, a fact that is illustrated by global wind speed maps that cover both onshore and offshore areas using the same input data and methodology.
For the North Sea, wind turbine energy is around 30 kWh/m2 of sea area, per year, delivered to grid. The energy per sea area is roughly independent of turbine size.
The technical exploitable resource potential for offshore wind is a factor of the average wind speed and water depth, as it is only possible to generate electricity from offshore wind resources where turbines can be anchored. Currently, fixed foundation offshore wind turbines can be installed up to around 50 meters of sea depth. Beyond that, floating foundation turbines would be required, potentially allowing installation at depths of up to 1 kilometer based on currently proposed technologies.
Based on an analysis of viable water depths and wind speeds over 7 m/s, it has been estimated that there is over 17 terawatt of offshore wind technical potential in just the 50 countries studied, not including most OECD countries such as Australia, Japan, the United States or Western Europe. Well-endowed countries such as Argentina and China have almost 2TW and 3TW of potential respectively, illustrating the vast potential of offshore wind in such locations.

Planning and permitting

A number of things are necessary in order to attain the necessary information for planning the commissioning of an offshore wind farm.
The first information required is offshore wind characteristics.
Additional necessary data for planning includes water depth, currents, seabed, migration, and wave action, all of which drive mechanical and structural loading on potential turbine configurations.
Other factors include marine growth, salinity, icing, and the geotechnical characteristics of the sea or lake bed.
Existing hardware for measurements includes Light Detection and Ranging, Sonic Detection and Ranging, radar, autonomous underwater vehicles, and remote satellite sensing, although these technologies should be assessed and refined, according to a report from a coalition of researchers from universities, industry, and government, supported by the Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future.
Because of the many factors involved, one of the biggest difficulties with offshore wind farms is the ability to predict loads.
Analysis must account for the dynamic coupling between translational and rotational platform motions and turbine motions, as well as the dynamic characterization of mooring lines for floating systems.
Foundations and substructures make up a large fraction of offshore wind systems, and must take into account every single one of these factors.
Load transfer in the grout between tower and foundation may stress the grout, and elastomeric bearings are used in several British sea turbines.
Corrosion is also a serious problem and requires detailed design considerations.
The prospect of remote monitoring of corrosion looks very promising using expertise utilised by the offshore oil/gas industry and other large industrial plants.
Some of the guidelines for designing offshore wind farms are IEC 61400-3, but in the US several other standards are necessary.
In the EU, different national standards are to be streamlined into more cohesive guidelines to lower costs.
The standards require that a loads analysis is based on site-specific external conditions such as wind, wave and currents.
The planning and permitting phase can cost more than $10 million, take 5–7 years and have an uncertain outcome.
The industry is putting pressure on governments to improve the processes.
In Denmark, many of these phases have been deliberately streamlined by authorities in order to minimize hurdles, and this policy has been extended for coastal wind farms with a concept called ’one-stop-shop’.
The United States introduced a similar model called [|"Smart from the Start"] in 2012.
In the European Union, the revised Renewable Energy Directive of 2018 has simplified the permitting process to help initiate wind projects.

Legal framework

The installation and operation of offshore wind turbines are regulated in both national and international law. The relevant international legal framework is UNCLOS which regulates the rights and responsibilities of the States in regards to the use of the oceans. The maritime zone the offshore wind turbines are located in determines which regulatory rules apply.
In the territorial waters the coastal State has full sovereignty and therefore, the regulation of offshore wind turbines are fully under national jurisdiction.
The exclusive economic zone is not part of the State’s territory but is subject to the coastal State’s exclusive jurisdiction and control for selected purposes, one of which is the production of energy from winds. This means that within this zone, the coastal State has the right to install and operate offshore wind farms and to establish safety zones around them that must be respected by all ships, as long as a due notice about the installation has been given. Also, neither installations nor safety zones can interfere with sea lanes that are considered essential for international navigation.
Beyond the exclusive economic zones are the high seas, or the international waters. Within this zone the purpose of producing energy is not explicitly mentioned as a high seas freedom and the legal status of offshore wind facilities is therefore unclear. In academia, it has been argued that the uncertainty of the legal status of offshore wind facilities on the high seas could become an object of interstate disputes over the rights of use. As a solution, it has been suggested that offshore wind facilities could be incorporated as a high seas freedom by being considered as ships or artificial islands, installations and structures.
As of 2020, energy production from winds on the high seas is not yet technically feasible due to the complications that follow from deeper water. However, the advancing technology of floating wind turbines is a step towards the realization of deepwater wind projects.

Turbine construction materials considerations

Since offshore wind turbines are located in oceans and large lakes, the materials used for the turbines have to be modified from the materials used for land based wind turbines and optimized for corrosion resistance to salt water and the new loading forces experienced by the tower being partially submerged in water. With one of the main reasons for interest in offshore wind power being the higher wind speeds, some of the loading differences will come from higher shearing forces between the top and bottom of the wind turbine due to differences in wind speeds. There should also be considerations for the buffeting loads that will be experienced by the waves around the base of the tower, which converges on the use of steel tubular towers for offshore wind applications.
Since there’s constant exposure to salt and water for offshore wind turbines, the steel used for the monopile and turbine tower must be treated for corrosion resistance, especially at the base of the tower in the “splash zone” for waves breaking against the tower and in the monopile. Two techniques that can be used include cathode protection and the use of coatings to reduce corrosion pitting, which is a common source for hydrogen induced stress cracking. For cathode protection, galvanized anodes are attached to the monopile and have enough of a potential difference with the steel to be preferentially corroded over the steel used in the monopile. Some coatings that have been applied to offshore wind turbines include hot dip zinc coatings and 2-3 epoxy coatings with a polyurethane topcoat.

Installation

Specialized jackup rigs are used to install foundation and turbine. the next generation of vessels are being built, capable of lifting 3-5,000 tons to 160 meters.
A large number of monopile foundations have been used in recent years for economically constructing fixed-bottom offshore wind farms in shallow-water locations.
Each uses a single, generally large-diameter, foundation structural element to support all the loads of a large above-surface structure.
The typical construction process for a wind turbine sub-sea monopile foundation in sand includes using a pile driver to drive a large hollow steel pile 25 m deep into the seabed, through a 0.5 m layer of larger stone and gravel to minimize erosion around the pile. These piles can be 4 m in diameter with approximately 50mm thick walls.
A transition piece is attached to the now deeply driven pile, the sand and water are removed from the centre of the pile and replaced with concrete. An additional layer of even larger stone, up to 0.5 m diameter, is applied to the surface of the seabed for longer-term erosion protection.
For the ease of installing the towers and connecting them to the seabed, they are installed in two parts, the portion below the water surface and the portion above the water. The two portions of the tower are joined by a transition piece which is filled with a grouted connection. The grouted connected helps transfer the loads experienced by the turbine tower to the more stable monopile foundation of the turbine. One technique for strengthening the grout used in the connections is to include weld beads known as shear keys along the length of the grout connection to prevent any sliding between the monopile and the tower.

Grid connection

There are several different types of technologies that are being explored as viable options for integrating offshore wind power into the onshore grid. The most conventional method is through high-voltage alternating current transmission lines. HVAC transmission lines are currently the most commonly used form of grid connections for offshore wind turbines. However, there are significant limitations that prevent HVAC from being practical, especially as the distance to offshore turbines increases. First, HVAC is limited by cable charging currents, which are a result of capacitance in the cables. Undersea AC cables have a much higher capacitance than overhead AC cables, so losses due to capacitance become much more significant, and the voltage magnitude at the receiving end of the transmission line can be significantly different from the magnitude at the receiving end. In order to compensate for these losses, either more cables or reactive compensation must be added to the system. Both of these add costs to the system. Additionally, because HVAC cables have both real and reactive power flowing through them, there can be additional losses. Because of these losses, underground HVAC lines are limited in how far they can extend. The maximum appropriate distance for HVAC transmission for offshore wind power is considered to be around 80 km.
Using high-voltage direct current cables has been a proposed alternative to using HVAC cables. HVDC transmission cables are not affected by the cable charging currents and experience less power loss because HVDC does not transmit reactive power. With less losses, undersea HVDC lines can extend much farther than HVAC. This makes HVDC preferable for siting wind turbines very far offshore. However, HVDC requires power converters in order to connect to the AC grid. Both line commutated converters and voltage source converters have been considered for this. Although LCCs are a much more widespread technology and cheaper, VSCs have many more benefits, including independent active power and reactive power control. New research has been put into developing hybrid HVDC technologies that have a LCC connected to a VSC through a DC cable.
In order to transport the energy from offshore wind turbines to onshore energy plants, cabling has to be placed along the ocean floor. The cabling has to be able to transfer large amounts of current efficiently which requires optimization of the materials used for the cabling as well as determining cable paths for the use of a minimal amount of cable materials. One way to reduce the cost of the cables used in these applications is to convert the copper conductors to aluminum conductors, however the suggested replacement brings up an issue of increased cable motion and potential damage since aluminum is less dense than copper.

Maintenance

Turbines are much less accessible when offshore, and thus reliability is more important than for an onshore turbine. Some wind farms located far from possible onshore bases have service teams living on site in offshore accommodation units. To limit the effects of corrosion on the blades of a wind turbine, a protective tape of elastomeric materials is applied, though the droplet erosion protection coatings provide better protection from the elements.
A maintenance organization performs maintenance and repairs of the components, spending almost all its resources on the turbines. The conventional way of inspecting the blades is for workers to rappel down the blade, taking a day per turbine. Some farms inspect the blades of three turbines per day by photographing them from the monopile through a 600mm lens, avoiding to go up. Others use camera drones.
Because of their remote nature, prognosis and health-monitoring systems on offshore wind turbines will become much more necessary. They would enable better planning just-in-time maintenance, thereby reducing the operations and maintenance costs. According to a report from a coalition of researchers from universities, industry, and government, making field data from these turbines available would be invaluable in validating complex analysis codes used for turbine design. Reducing this barrier would contribute to the education of engineers specializing in wind energy.

Decommissioning

As the first offshore wind farms reach their end of life, a demolition industry develops to recycle them at a cost of DKK 2-4 million per MW, to be guaranteed by the owner.
The first offshore wind farm to be decommissioned was Yttre Stengrund in Sweden in November 2015, followed by Vindeby in 2017 and Blyth in 2019.

Environmental impact

Offshore wind farms have very low global warming potential per unit of electricity generated, comparable to that of onshore wind farms. Offshore installations also have the advantage of limited impact of noise and on the landscape compared to land-based projects. Furthermore, in a few local cases there is evidence that offshore wind installations have contributed to the restoration of damaged ecosystems by functioning as artificial reefs.
While the offshore wind industry has grown dramatically over the last several decades, there is still a great deal of uncertainty associated with how the construction and operation of these wind farms affect marine animals and the marine environment.
Common environmental concerns associated with offshore wind developments include:
Because offshore wind is a relatively new industry, there is not yet any evidence on the long-term environmental impacts of offshore wind activities nor any studies on the cumulative effects on several marine activities in the same area.
The Tethys database provides access to scientific literature and general information on the potential environmental effects of offshore wind energy.

Largest offshore wind farms

Wind farmLocationSite coordinatesCapacity
Turbines & modelCommissioning
date
Refs
Hornsea 11,218174 x Siemens SWT-7.0-1542019
Walney Extension65940 x MHI-Vestas 8.25 MW
47 x Siemens Gamesa 7 MW
2018
London Array630175 × Siemens SWT-3.6-1202013
Gemini Wind Farm600150 × Siemens SWT-4.02017
Beatrice58884 × Siemens SWT-7.0-1542019
Gode Wind 58297 x Siemens SWT-6.0-1542017
Gwynt y Môr576160 × Siemens SWT-3.6-1072015
Race Bank57391 x Siemens SWT-6.0-1542018
Greater Gabbard504140 × Siemens SWT-3.6-1072012
Hohe See49771 x Siemens SWT-7.0-1542019
Borkum Riffgrund 245056 x MHI Vestas V164-8.0 MW2019
Horns Rev 340749 x MHI Vestas V164-8.3 MW2019
Dudgeon40267 × Siemens SWT-6.0-1542017
Veja Mate40267 × Siemens SWT-6.0-1542017
Anholt400111 × Siemens SWT-3.6-1202013
BARD Offshore 140080 × BARD 5.0MW2013
40080 × Areva Multibrid M5000 5.0MW2015
Rampion400116 x MHI Vestas V112-3.45 MW2018
Binhai North400100 x Siemens SWT-4.0-1202018

Projects

Most of the current projects are in European and East Asian waters.
There are also several proposed developments in North America.
Projects are under development in the United States in wind-rich areas of the East Coast, Great Lakes, and Pacific coast.
In January 2012, a "Smart for the Start" regulatory approach was introduced, designed to expedite the siting process while incorporating strong environmental protections.
Specifically, the Department of Interior approved “wind energy areas” off the coast where projects can move through the regulatory approval process more quickly.
The first offshore wind farm in the USA is the 30-megawatt, 5 turbine Block Island Wind Farm which was commissioned in December 2016. Many sportfishermen and marine biologists believe the bases of the five, 6-megawatt wind turbines off of Block Island are acting as an artificial reef.
Another offshore wind farm that is in the planning phase is off the coast of Virginia Beach. On 3 August 2018, Dominion Energy announced its two wind turbine pilot program that will be 27 miles offshore from Virginia Beach. The area is undergoing a survey that will last for 4–6 weeks.
Canadian wind power in the province of Ontario is pursuing several proposed locations in the Great Lakes, including the suspended Trillium Power Wind 1 approximately 20 km from shore and over 400 MW in capacity.
Other Canadian projects include one on the Pacific west coast.
India is looking at the potential of offshore wind power plants, with a 100 MW demonstration plant being planned off the coast of Gujarat. In 2013, a group of organizations, led by Global Wind Energy Council started project FOWIND to identify potential zones for development of off-shore wind power in India and to stimulate R & D activities in this area. In 2014 FOWIND commissioned Center for Study of Science, Technology and Policy to undertake pre-feasibility studies in eight zones in Tamil Nadu which have been identified as having potential.

Offshore wind power by country

Most of offshore wind farms are currently in northern Europe.
The United Kingdom and Germany alone accounted for roughly two thirds of the total offshore wind power capacity installed worldwide in 2016.
Other countries, such as China, are rapidly expanding their offshore wind power capacity.
RankCountry2016201720182019
1United Kingdom5,1566,6517,9639,723
2Germany4,1085,4116,3807,493
3China1,6272,7884,5886,838
4Denmark1,2711,2681,3291,703
5Belgium7128771,1861,556
6Netherlands1,1181,1181,1181,118
7Sweden202202192191
8Taiwan088128
9Vietnam99999999
10Japan60656585
11South Korea35387373
12Finland32928771
13United States30303030
14Ireland25252525
15Spain5555
16Norway2222
17France0222
World total14,48218,65823,14029,142