The potential sites for UK floating offshore wind installations are quite different to those found elsewhere in the world. In the United States and Japan, for example, the waters where these platforms could be sited are up to 1,000m deep whereas the target sites in the UK are only around 60-120m. That has led to the focus on two specific types of platform we are now seeing tested at sea—semi-submersibles and barges – as they seem particularly well suited to the UK’s ocean and seabed conditions. Over the next few years, it will be critical that these designs continue to be improved – both from an energy generation and cost perspective – to meet the UK’s ambitious 2030 and 2050 Net Zero goals.
Dr Emma Edwards
Research Fellow in ORE Hydrodynamics
The UK is a world leader in the development of offshore wind technology, and it forms the backbone of the Government’s future plans for energy generation and net zero. That creates an unprecedented economic opportunity, both for the companies at the forefront of the technology’s development as well as the engineering sector, ports and communities that will be essential to its infrastructure. This study shows the progress being made in the design of floating offshore wind technology is moving at pace, and it is critical these other sectors are factored in as plans are scaled up for the technology’s future development and deployment.
Professor Deborah Greaves OBE FREng
Professor in Ocean Engineering
- The full study – Edwards et al: Evolution of floating offshore wind platforms: A review of at-sea devices – is published in Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2023.113416.
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