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Offshore Wind Gets $180 Million Boost from DOE

Ernest Tucker, EERE
March 07, 2012  |  9 Comments

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DOE announced on March 1 the start of an initiative to capture wind energy off U.S. coasts. As part of a planned six-year, $180 million initiative, an initial $20 million will be available this year as the first step in supporting up to four innovative offshore wind energy installations. These offshore wind projects will accelerate the deployment of breakthrough wind power technologies that will help diversify the U.S. energy portfolio. Offshore wind resources in the United States are estimated at more than 4,000 gigawatts.

The demonstration projects will help address key challenges associated with installing utility-scale offshore wind turbines, connecting offshore turbines to the power grid, and navigating new permitting and approval processes. In addition to the new funding, DOE is continuing to work with partners across the federal government to implement a comprehensive offshore wind energy strategy, conduct resource assessments, and streamline siting and permitting processes.

Applicants to the competitive solicitation are expected to form consortia of energy project developers, equipment suppliers, research institutions, and marine-installation specialists. DOE funds may be used to cover up to 80% of a project's design costs and 50% of the hardware and installation costs. Applications are due on May 31, 2012. See the DOE press release and the funding opportunity details.

This story was originally published in the EERE Network Newsletter and was republished with permission.

Image: Eugene Suslo via Shutterstock

9 Comments

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Frankie Diaz
Frankie Diaz
March 12, 2012
I have a better use for the $180,000,000.00. Use it to pay interest on a day or two of the "national" debt. No subsidies for anyone; if the entrepreneurs and promoters can't make it work with their own funds and the funds of their investors, why should "everyone" pay for their mistakes?

Renewable energy sources are RENEWABLE if they are economically feasible, if they pay for themselves without subsidies from anyone. I agree that "Big Oil" should get off the federal teat (like 200 years ago). Same for everything else: solar, geo, hydro, nuke.

Oh, and stop wasting food with the "ethanol" thing.
ANONYMOUS
March 11, 2012
zzyzx,

I think everyone here understands that wind energy is considered renewable. The focus of the discussion should be about the financial aspects of commercial wind energy. It's a fact of life that the US economy depends heavily on energy. Most of that energy currently comes from coal and natural gas. While wind power is getting cheaper, it still cannot compete with coal and NG. Forcing a rapid, large scale switch to more expensive wind or solar would have serious consequences for the US economy. There is also the more practical issue of the ability of the US to rapidly switch over to wind or solar. Presently, the growth in wind and solar are barely adequate to keep up with the US increase in demand, let alone replace existing capacity.

As for the subject of the article, when the DOE hands out $180 million in taxpayer money, we need to make sure that money is used wisely and produces results. That $180 million did not just magically appear. Every dollar the government spends is a dollar taken from the private sector.
Dr. A. Cannara
Dr. A. Cannara
March 10, 2012
Actually, at 50% of generation now, so there's very green power in efficiency. We've more sunlit structural surface in our communities than we need to meet peak daytime power needs, so there's no need for wind at all. Baseload power has a nu,ber of clean choices, and the need for storage will indeed be met, partly via EV charge/discharge (e.g., betterplace.com). Wind's waste of land/sea & resources is of no use, and is becoming less useful in various ways, in various places...

http://spectrum.ieee.org/green-tech/wind/a-less-mighty-wind
www.nytimes.com/2011/01/21/us/21tttransmission.html?_r=1&hpw
www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/allan-farago-big-wind-s-inconvenient-truth (Maine)
http://seekingalpha.com/article/262713-wind-power-investors-get-another-reality-check?source=email_alternative_energy_investing

And, wind folks never seem to put $ aside to clean up their messes...
http://webecoist.com/2009/05/04/10-abandoned-renewable-energy-plants/
zz yzx
zz yzx
March 10, 2012
all of you arguing are missing the point. wind energy is renewable, it helps us achieve energy independence, and it sure beats oil from the middle east, where the people take our money and then use it to kill us.
ANONYMOUS
March 10, 2012
Off-shore wind is definitely more expensive than on-shore. And since the US has lots of available prime on-shore capacity, I do not see the need for additional DOE subsidies for off-shore development at this time. While the program's $180 million budget sounds impressive, divided four ways over six years, it is not big in terms of off-shore turbine costs. Especially if the turbines designs are developmental in nature, and there is no existing off-shore infrastructure to support them.

A better use of the DOE funds would be for advancing technologies and designs that facilitate larger on-shore turbine installations. On-shore is where most future wind energy growth lies, not off-shore. Let the EU waste money on fanciful nonsense like massive DD PM offshore turbine designs, which make no sense commercially. Spending that $180 million to develop an 8MW or 10MW onshore turbine design that can easily be transported would give the US a dominant position in the market.
Dr. A. Cannara
Dr. A. Cannara
March 9, 2012
Thanks Thomas. The problem with wind is that it will always be less efficient and more environmentally damaging than local solar, especially as solar moves upward toward 30-40% efficiency, and as states like Calif. encourage installations on existing structures (DG), such as nearby...
www.cityofpaloalto.org/news/displaynews.asp?NewsID=1877⌖id=223

There's no need for wind's perpetual transmission loss, low efficiency per acre, variability, and consumption of ~700tons/MW peak of fossil-fuel prepared materials (coal, iron ore, steel, limestone, aggregate concrete, maintenance...).

Wind is simply another subsidized scam for the few. Can check out "The Wind Farm Scam", or examples like...

www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/allan-farago-big-wind-s-inconvenient-truth (Maine)
http://seekingalpha.com/article/262713-wind-power-investors-get-another-reality-check?source=email_alternative_energy_investing

But, my favorite: http://tinyurl.com/bl9vlc7
http://politics.foxnews.mobi/ quickPage.html?page=23888& content=67825755&pageNum=-1 (same?)

At least we'll have several hundred tons of steel to use for better purposes later, and some expensive, Chinese rare-earth materials in the generators when they're obsolete. We can indeed build some useful things with all that.
;]
Thomas Poppitz
Thomas Poppitz
March 9, 2012
Guys: Energy credits should only be temporary, and designed to START UP things we believe will serve the national good. Meaning we should have STOPPED oil subsidies many decades ago. We also know that we know the drawbacks of our oil dependance (trade deficits, national security issues, avoidable wars, etc.) so it's more apparent than ever that we need to invest in alternatives. To Dr.A's assertion (waste on wind)... I agree that any conscious tax-payer-paid "investment" (aka: tax credits) should have an assortiated time line that weans that emerging industry off those subsidies... which wind does (expiring and reducing credits over time)... unless Congress messes it up like it did with oil many decades ago.
craig nyman
craig nyman
March 9, 2012
Right Dr. A, How about continuing subsidy for big oil? It pails by comparison. I think it is time for real parity $1 for oil - $1 for real renewable. What do you think?
Dr. A. Cannara
Dr. A. Cannara
March 9, 2012
Continuing the waste on wind. Continuing subsidy for the few paid by the many.

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