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Windtech International September October 2024 issue

 

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Europe today wants an even faster expansion of renewables as part of its response to the Ukraine crisis. The European Union (EU) asks for an additional 30 GW of wind energy by 2030 to help replace a significant part of Russian fossil fuel imports well before the end of this decade.
 
The EU had already established ambitious targets for offshore wind, which called for 60 GW by 2030 and 300 GW by 2050. Together with the UK and Norway, Europe could have up to 450 GW of offshore wind in operation by 2050.
 
The statement signed by 25 parties reinforces the commitment of Governments, TSOs and wind industry to work together on offshore wind expansion in all European sea basins to accelerate Europe’s energy transition.
 
The Governments of Spain, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, the United Kingdom and Estonia, alongside the TSOs National Grid Ventures, Elia, 50Hz, Tennet, LitGrid, and wind industry representatives pledged to collaborate, cooperate and coordinate measures to support offshore wind deployment.
 
The signatories have committed to work together to provide a visible pipeline of offshore wind projects and hybrid interconnectors, and to remove regulatory and permitting barriers. They aim to coordinate the design of tenders and identify best practices in national support schemes, including the use of non-price criteria. They will also cooperate on identifying new areas for offshore wind build-out as part of national maritime spatial planning regimes.
 
The signatories aim to establish regulatory frameworks for offshore wind and offshore hybrid projects that secure a predictable long-term market environment and sustainable business models. This includes developing market arrangements for offshore hybrids that fairly distribute the costs and benefits between countries, TSOs and offshore wind farm developers.
 
The signatories will cooperate to identify hybrid projects that can be deployed quickly. This will lead to a more efficient deployment of infrastructure, optimise sea use, and protect the maritime environment, whilst reducing the impact on coastal communities. And stakeholders also support closer coordination in general planning infrastructure for offshore wind, and on- and offshore grid build-out.
 
The  statement also called for the scale-up of innovation in technologies that enable better integration of offshore wind into the power grid, such as the interoperability of High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) technology.
 
The statement calls on the European Commission to support the implementation of this statement, which is line with the objectives set in the EU Offshore Renewable Energy Strategy and by the European response to the Ukraine crisis.
 
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