Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!
The US Department of Energy has poured a ton of figurative blood, sweat, and tears into supporting innovative floating platforms for offshore wind turbines, only to see them float off to Europe where public policy support for offshore wind development runs strong. Now that the US is finally getting its policy ducks in the water, made-in-the-USA floating wind platforms are finally coming home.
Floating Platforms For More Offshore Wind
Floating wind turbine platforms are an engineering challenge, but the Energy Department has been pitching them as the key to opening up vast offshore wind resources in deep water, where conventional fixed-bottom platforms are impractical if not impossible (see more floating wind news here).
One focus of Energy Department support for the US floating wind industry has been the firm Principle Power, which first crossed the CleanTechnica radar back in 2009. It’s been a long road but finally the end is in sight.
“By 2014 Principle Power was demonstrating its floating wind power technology off the coast of Oregon, again with the support of the US Department of Energy, and the company has continued to help shepherd the floating wind industry along here in the US,” we reported back in 2021.
Floating Wind Turbines Float Home
Unfortunately for US offshore wind fans, that helpfulness had yet to materialize in domestic waters as of 2021, but Principle Power was laying the groundwork for its come-home moment, eventually.
In 2019 the company teamed up in a consortium to win a $3.6 million grant from the Energy Department’s ARPA-E high risk, high reward funding office. The grant supported the development of new software billed as “the world’s first digital twin software tailored to floating offshore wind applications.”
“This digital twin model will be a real-time, high-fidelity numerical representation of the WindFloat Atlantic (WFA) Project, which will be one of the world’s first floating offshore wind farms,” Principle Power enthused in a press statement.
They also noted that WindFloat Atlantic is off the coat of northern Portugal, not the US. However, Sam Kanner, R&D Lead at Principle Power, explained that the new “DigiFloat” software will go to benefit the whole floating offshore wind industry, with the anticipation of reduced downtime and reduced costs, among other benefits.
The WindFloat Atlantic Factor
WindFloat Atlantic was up and running in 2020, leaving the US floating wind industry even farther behind in the dust. Nevertheless, the project — a venture joining Principle Power with the European energy firms EDP Renewables, Engie, and Repsol — serves as a global showcase that can help the US offshore wind industry kick into high gear.
By the end of 2023, the three semi-submersible floating turbines at WindFloat Atlantic had generated 80 gigawattt-hours of electricity, exceeding production expectations while battling killer storms, including one with wave heights of 20 meters and wind gusts of 139 kilometers per hour.
Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.
Latest CleanTechnica.TV Video
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.
Source: Clean Technica

