State Lands Commission Advances Offshore Wind Demonstration Project

October 21, 2021

The California Wind Energy Association (澳门百老汇网站网址) today praised the State Lands Commission for advancing two proposed offshore wind demonstration projects near Vandenberg Air Force Base.  “This decision is an important step forward to make floating offshore wind a reality for California,” said Nancy Rader, Executive Director of 澳门百老汇网站网址. 

In a 3-0 vote Thursday, the three-member Commission voted to authorize the preparation of Environmental Impact Reports for two projects, CADEMO, a joint venture by CIERCO Corp. and SBM Offshore, and another project by Ideol. These environmental studies are necessary prior to any decision on final project approval.

“The CADEMO project creates a ‘high road’ model with local economic development and union jobs, which will build a foundation for the future expansion of the industry,” Rader said. “These projects are of enormous scale, with unprecedented logistical challenges, but they can create a sizeable local supply chain with good green jobs – if the ‘high road’ model is followed. Without careful planning, California’s offshore wind projects could be imported rather than fabricated and assembled locally.”

The CADEMO project proposes to construct four floating turbines, each of 12–15 megawatts (MW) electrical production capacity, which will test multiple engineering concepts for the floating wind turbine foundations, their mooring systems, and other technologies. The recipe for local economic benefits derives in part from a High Road Training Partnership grant from the California Workforce Development Board to the San Luis Obispo County Office of Education, with participation by CIERCO, the State Building Trades Council, IBEW 1245, Cal Poly, REACH, and the Workforce Development Boards of Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. “This workforce partnership could be a game changer for how offshore wind is perceived statewide – not just as green energy, but as a real driver of prosperity,” Rader said.

Rader said the state has been lagging behind East Coast states on offshore wind, but today’s decision is a step toward real action. “In contrast to fixed-bottom offshore wind that is common in Europe and soon to be ubiquitous on the East Coast, floating offshore wind is in its infancy, and California has an opportunity to be a player in the global market.”

California’s current plan for meeting its SB 100 greenhouse gas targets includes the installation of 10,000 MW of offshore wind by 2045 off the Central and Northern Coasts because the resource complements the solar production profile which improves system reliability while lowering costs. The CADEMO project, which could be operational by 2026, will provide a roadmap for scaling up California’s own capabilities to achieve that goal.

Ideol proposes to install four floating offshore wind turbines of 10 MW each.

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