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U.S. Offshore Wind Developers Push For Less Stringent Subsidy Rules
Posted on 9/6/23 at 7:29 am
Posted on 9/6/23 at 7:29 am
quote:
Major energy and wind power developers are pressing the U.S. Administration to ease the requirements for subsidy eligibility for offshore wind, saying that the current rules under the Inflation Reduction Act make many investments uneconomical.
Orsted, the Danish group leader on the offshore wind market, Norway’s energy major Equinor, and France’s Engie are some of the companies that have told Reuters that the current IRA provisions for tax credits are hampering the swift construction and project development.
Under the IRA, projects can receive stackable bonus credits for any or all of the following; meeting domestic manufacturing thresholds of 100% domestic steel or iron, 40% domestically-manufactured components for land-based wind, or 20% domestically-manufactured components for offshore wind. Additional bonuses go to developers for locating facilities in low-income communities or on tribal lands, in fossil-fuel-powered communities, or in a low-income residential building or economic benefit project.
However, the offshore wind project developers say that they simply cannot meet such requirements because many of the components cannot be found in the U.S. and are not currently manufactured there.
quote:
In a sign of the struggling offshore wind industry, the latest lease sale, the first-ever such sale in the Gulf of Mexico, was a flop last week, attracting just one bid, from Germany’s RWE. Out of three areas up for lease, two did not receive any bids.
LINK
Posted on 9/6/23 at 7:42 am to ragincajun03
Serious question
How in the world are these off shore wind turbines going to be hurricane proof?
How in the world are these off shore wind turbines going to be hurricane proof?
Posted on 9/6/23 at 7:49 am to ragincajun03
I worked with a guy who was a wheel at an offshore windmill company, he literally told me “if the government would just get out of our way, we could provide energy to the entire US.” It was at that point i realized that most of the windmill people are delusional idiots. The only reason he has a job is because of the government haha.
Posted on 9/6/23 at 7:57 am to TigerGman
I’m still trying to figure out how offshore wind can turn a profit when just the service vessels alone are $150 million plus. They make deep water drilling look cheap
Posted on 9/6/23 at 8:14 am to Taxman2010
I worked for a company that produces that cable for the substation to land connections. Edit: this is for offshore
.it is a HUGE SCAM.
0% percent of this would happen without government cheese.
.it is a HUGE SCAM.
0% percent of this would happen without government cheese.
This post was edited on 9/6/23 at 8:16 am
Posted on 9/6/23 at 8:29 am to ragincajun03
quote:
the first-ever such sale in the Gulf of Mexico, was a flop last week, attracting just one bid

Posted on 9/6/23 at 8:58 am to bayoudude
quote:
I’m still trying to figure out how offshore wind can turn a profit when just the service vessels alone are $150 million plus
They can’t without massive government subsidies. I worked on evaluating the project evaluating bringing offshore wind into NY and the cost per MW is so much higher than if there were generated onshore.
NextEra, which is the largest renewable producer won’t do any offshore wind, because they have always contended that even with the subsidies it’s not economically feasible.
Posted on 9/6/23 at 9:46 am to ithad2bme
I wonder how the 5 wind mills that were installed off the coast of Rhode Island are doing?
Posted on 9/6/23 at 10:23 am to ithad2bme
quote:
NextEra, which is the largest renewable producer won’t do any offshore wind, because they have always contended that even with the subsidies it’s not economically feasible.
And they're correct. Offshore wind has insane O&M expenses.
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