"As California moves forward to meet 50 percent of the state's energy needs with clean, renewable energy by 2030, wind power will play an important role,� said David Hochschild, commissioner with the California Energy Commission.
In 2015, onshore wind generated 11,856 gigawatt-hours, or 6.06 percent of the in-state total power generation in California. Offshore wind is new to California.
Last May, Governor Edmund Brown Jr. asked the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to create an Intergovernmental Renewable Energy Task Force to examine opportunities for offshore wind renewable energy development along the California coast.
That task force is a non-regulatory entity that will facilitate coordination and communication between BOEM and state, local, federal and tribal agencies on potential offshore leases for research activity or commercial development.
The leases would be located on federal submerged lands on the outer continental shelf.
The first offshore wind projects being considered in California would be located in federal waters northeast of Morro Bay and the operator would be the Seattle-based Trident Winds.
The proposed project would entail the use of 100 floating foundations each supporting a wind turbine that can produce up to 8 megawatts (MW). The project is expected to generate up to 800 MW.
California Offshore Wind Map courtesy of National Renewable Energy Laboratory |
"This offshore wind project proposal, the first of its kind, marks another important milestone," said Hochschild.
The potential impact for offshore wind was recently established in an analysis by the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL). That analysis found that areas off the west coast and Hawaii have the potential of generating over 1.5 terawatts of offshore wind energy. NREL also found that offshore wind hourly characteristics may be complimentary to solar in California.
Offshore wind offers advantages such more as the more consistent wind speeds that are present over the ocean. These allow higher utilization rates compared with similarly sized onshore wind turbines.
The current hurdle for offshore wind projects is that they are significantly more costly to build and maintain than onshore wind.