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GREENER IS CHEAPER: AN EXAMPLE FROM OFFSHORE WIND FARMS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2024

Subhamoy Bhattacharya*
Affiliation:
University of Surrey & RENEW-RISK (A University of Surrey Spin-in), Guildford, UK
Dan Kammen
Affiliation:
Energy and Resources Group and Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Subhamoy Bhattacharya; Email: S.Bhattacharya@surrey.ac.uk

Abstract

Offshore wind farms (OWF) are now in operation and increasingly under construction as scalable, sustainable energy sources. In fact OWFs are currently the cheapest form of new energy projects in Europe. The levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for OWF has fallen drastically due to decades of innovation facilitated by both taxpayer and private sector funding. This emerging industry is experiencing massive worldwide growth with the potential to accelerate the decarbonization of regional and the global economy as well as bring a reliable source of green hydrogen into commercial use, all with minimal disruption to ecosystems and impacts on biodiversity. This paper provides a historical perspective of wind energy harnessing and shows that wind turbines are the oldest, largest and one of the smartest machines. We also highlight the potential of offshore wind energy to provide new solutions to (a) meet clean energy demand for a growing world population, (b) improve energy security of nations through other downstream technologies such as production and storage of dispatchable fuel (such as green hydrogen battery storage) and (c) through supply complementarity improve resilience of nuclear power plants in high-seismic-activity areas. Offshore wind industry can also become a gold standard for future industries, and the paper provides insights into the new green economics and jobs and factories for the future. We show that environment-friendly regulation is driving innovations even further to enhance sustainability of OWF. Examples include material recycling, landfill ban on blade disposal and ecofriendly low-noise offshore construction to protect biodiversity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of National Institute Economic Review

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