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A stock photo of a vessel servicing an offshore wind farm at sunset

A stock photo of a vessel servicing an offshore wind farm at sunset. Photo: Eddytb Foto/Shutterstock

Vessel Delay Sinks Orsted’s New Jersey Offshore Wind Projects

Reuters
Total Views: 3518
November 3, 2023

Orsted is attributing the cancellation of its Ocean Wind projects to factors including high inflation, rising interest rates and supply chain constraints, particularly a vessel delay that considerably impacted project timing.

Reuters

By Scott DiSavino

Nov 3 (Reuters) – Danish energy firm Orsted’s shock decision to cancel two offshore wind farms off New Jersey this week was based in large part on big delays securing the ship it needed to build the project, company officials said.

The world’s biggest offshore wind farm company on Tuesday said it would cease all development on the Ocean Wind projects even as it moves forward with developments off neighboring New York, triggering an angry response from New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy.

Crisis in U.S. Offshore Wind Industry Escalates

The decision came as a surprise in part because New Jersey had passed a law letting offshore wind developers like Orsted keep federal tax credits that were previously destined for ratepayers to offset their power costs, a concession intended to keep the projects alive.

“People did not anticipate (Orsted) backing out of Ocean Wind,” said Timothy Fox, VP at research firm ClearView Energy Partners. 

Orsted CEO Mads Nipper, on a call with analyst the day after announcing the cancellation said: “Significant delays on vessel availability … in the entire market has now meant that it would implicate a multi-year delay of the entire project.” 

He said those delays would put Orsted in “a situation where we would need to go out and recontract all or very large scopes of the project at expectedly higher prices.”

MOVING AHEAD IN NEW YORK

In New York, Orsted is moving forward with construction of its 704-megawatt (MW) Revolution project and is taking “a cautionary approach” to its 924-MW Sunrise project. 

Nipper told analysts that unlike Ocean Wind, Orsted is still pursuing Sunrise for several reasons, including the fact that the company has already lined up a vessel to build it.

He added that Orsted believes it can secure a 10% bonus federal tax credit for Sunrise – reserved for projects that use a certain amount of domestically-produced content – and more money for its power by rebidding the project in an expected expedited solicitation in New York.

Under the most accelerated proposal, the New York State Energy Research & Development Authority said it could release the next offshore wind request for proposals in late November or early December. Bidders would have four weeks to prepare proposals and awards could be made as early as late January.

New York Ruling Deals Latest Blow to US Offshore Wind Industry

Analysts had expected Orsted and a joint venture between European energy firms Equinor and BP, which has developed three other offshore wind projects, to cancel their contracts to sell offshore wind power in New York after state regulators earlier this month refused to renegotiate those agreements. 

Instead the companies announced writeoffs of up to $5.6 billion for Orsted, $540 million for BP and $300 million for Equinor.

The Ocean Wind cancellation was the latest setback for the nascent U.S. offshore wind industry in recent months, which U.S. President Joe Biden and several states have counted on to fight global warming.

Other energy firms have canceled contracts to sell power from offshore wind in Massachusetts and Connecticut because those deals, agreed upon before inflation and interest rates soared, were out of the money due to rising equipment, labor and financing costs as well as supply chain bottlenecks.

Governor Murphy said New Jersey should receive $300 million if Orsted’s projects fail to proceed and directed his administration to “review all legal rights and remedies and to take all necessary steps to ensure that Orsted fully and immediately honors its obligations.”

(Reporting by Scott DiSavino and Jarrett Renshaw in New York and Nichola Groom in Culver City, California; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2023.

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