美国提议在墨西哥湾进行首次海上风电租赁销售

拟议中的墨西哥湾风电租赁销售将在路易斯安那州查尔斯湖和德克萨斯州加尔维斯顿近海开辟区域用于风电开发。墨西哥湾拥有大量石油和天然气产量。

海上的海上风力涡轮机。 (来源:Shutterstock.com)

美国已提议首次在墨西哥湾 (GoM) 进行海上风电租赁销售,并继续努力到 2030 年部署 30 吉瓦 (GW) 的海上风电。

2月22日宣布这一举措之际,拜登-哈里斯政府还采取措施发展美国的浮动风电行业,启动了一项以西海岸为重点的海上风电传输研究,扩大了海上风电研发联盟,并开发了海上风电项目。风电运营和维护路线图。

“美国”的清洁能源转型正在此时此地发生。内政部部长德布·哈兰在一份声明中表示,我们能源部正在采取行动,推动海上风电产业的发展,并利用美国的创新技术,为家庭和企业提供可靠、负担得起的电力。“没有时间可以浪费时间进行大胆投资来应对气候危机,而建立强大的国内海上风电产业是应对这一挑战的关键。”

拟议的在拥有大量石油和天然气生产的墨西哥湾的风能租赁销售将在路易斯安那州查尔斯湖近海开辟 102,480 英亩的土地,以及德克萨斯州加尔维斯顿近海的两个区域——一个面积为 102,480 英亩,另一个面积为 96,786 英亩。风开发。据内政部称,这些地区加起来可以为近 130 万户家庭提供清洁能源。

发展美国海上风电行业一直是拜登政府清洁能源雄心的关键部分。到目前为止,罗德岛州附近的布洛克岛和弗吉尼亚州沿海海上风电项目是仅有的两个在东海岸附近联邦水域运营的风电场。然而,还有更多项目正在进行中(主要在东海岸),而且更多项目可能即将推出。

12月,首次太平洋风电租赁销售为联邦水域浮动风电铺平了道路,加利福尼亚州莫罗湾和洪堡地区近海五个租赁区的开发权被授予。

尽管墨西哥湾的风能资源低于北大西洋和太平洋沿海国家,但根据国家可再生能源实验室为海洋能源管理局 (BOEM) 编写的 2020 年研究报告,墨西哥湾浅水区的资源容量很大,小于60 m 深。在某些条件下,路易斯安那州、得克萨斯州和佛罗里达州近海风能资源容量在美国浅水利用固定底部风力涡轮机的开发中名列前茅。

美国国家海洋工业协会主席埃里克·米利托称此次拟议出售是“美国海上风电行业建设的重要一步”。

“数十年的创新和经验使墨西哥湾成为首要的海上能源地区,包括成为低碳石油和天然气生产的领导者,”米利托说。“通过海上风电以及定期且可预测的海上石油和天然气租赁,美国墨西哥湾可以扩大其卓越且不可替代的能源组合。”

BOEM 表示正在寻求有关与拟议出售相关的潜在租赁规定的反馈。其中包括向支持劳动力培训计划或国内供应链发展的投标人提供信贷,建立渔业补偿缓解基金并为其捐款,以及要求承租人提供进度报告,总结他们与可能受拟议海上风电活动影响的部落和海洋用户的互动。

如果 BOEM 继续进行出售,将在出售前至少 30 天发布最终出售通知,宣布出售的时间、日期和符合资格的公司。

迄今为止,美国已举行了三场海上风电租赁拍卖。除了太平洋拍卖之外,还对纽约近海和卡罗来纳州近海面积进行了风电拍卖。

2022 年 2 月,纽约湾 (New York Bight) 海上风电拍卖中的 6 个租赁项目吸引了 6 家公司的竞标,总投标金额接近 44 亿美元,而 5 月份卡罗莱纳长湾海上风电 (Carolina Long Bay) 海上风电租赁拍卖的两个租赁项目的中标总额为 3.15 亿美元。

原文链接/hartenergy

US Proposes First Offshore Wind Lease Sale in Gulf of Mexico

The proposed wind lease sale in the Gulf of Mexico, home to vast oil and gas production, would open acreage offshore Lake Charles, La., and Galveston, Texas, for wind development.

Offshore wind turbines in the sea. (Source: Shutterstock.com)

The U.S. has proposed its first-ever offshore wind lease sale for the Gulf of Mexico (GoM), continuing its efforts to deploy 30 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind by 2030.

The move, announced Feb. 22, came as the Biden-Harris administration also took steps to grow the nation’s floating wind sector by launching an offshore wind transmission study focused on the West Coast, expanding an offshore wind R&D consortium and developing an offshore wind operations and maintenance roadmap.

“America’s clean energy transition is happening right here and now. At the Department, we are taking action to jumpstart our offshore wind industry and harness American innovation to deliver reliable, affordable power to homes and businesses,” Interior Department Secretary Deb Haaland said in a statement. “There is no time to waste in making bold investments to address the climate crisis, and building a strong domestic offshore wind industry is key to meeting that challenge head on.”

The proposed wind lease sale in the GoM, home to vast oil and gas production, would open 102,480 acres offshore Lake Charles, La., and two areas offshore Galveston, Texas— one for 102,480 acres and the other for 96,786 acres—for wind development. Combined, the areas could power nearly 1.3 million homes with clean energy, according to the Interior Department.

Growing the U.S. offshore wind sector has been a key piece of the Biden administration’s clean energy ambitions. So far, the Block Island off Rhode Island and the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind projects are the only two wind farms operating in federal waters, located off the East Coast. However, several more are in the works—mostly off the East Coast—and more could be on the horizon.

In December, the first Pacific Ocean wind lease sale paved the way for floating wind in federal water as development rights in five lease areas offshore California’s Morro Bay and Humboldt areas were awarded.

Though the GoM’s wind resources are lower than northern Atlantic and Pacific coastal states, according to a 2020 study prepared by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory for the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), resource capacity is large in shallow GoM water less than 60 m deep. Under certain conditions, it ranked wind resource capacity offshore Louisiana, Texas and Florida among the highest in the U.S. Developments in shallow water utilize fixed-bottom wind turbines.

National Ocean Industries Association president Erik Milito called the proposed sale an “important step in the build-out of the U.S. offshore wind sector.”

“Decades of innovation and experience has enabled the Gulf of Mexico to become a premier offshore energy region, including being a leader in low carbon oil and gas production,” Milito said. “Through offshore wind, along with regular and predictable offshore oil and gas leasing, the U.S. Gulf of Mexico can expand its remarkable and irreplaceable energy portfolio.”

BOEM said it is seeking feedback on potential lease stipulations associated with the proposed sale. These include granting credits to bidders that support workforce training programs or domestic supply chain development, establishing and contributing to a fisheries compensatory mitigation fund and requiring lessees provide progress reports summarizing their engagement with tribes and ocean users potentially affected by proposed offshore wind activities.

If BOEM proceeds with the sale, a final sale notice will be published at least 30 days before the sale announcing the sale’s time, date and qualifying companies.

So far, the U.S. has held three offshore wind lease auctions. Besides the Pacific Ocean sale, wind auctions took place for acreage offshore New York and offshore the Carolinas.

The New York Bight offshore wind auction for six leases in February 2022 drew competitive winning bids from six companies totaling nearly $4.4 billion in bids, while the Carolina Long Bay Offshore Wind lease sale in May for two leases brought in $315 million in total winning bids.