Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Study: Executive Summary: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE)

Gregory Brinkman, Mike Bannister, Sophie Bredenkamp, Lanaia Carveth, Dave Corbus, Rebecca Green, Luke Lavin, Anthony Lopez, Melinda Marquis, Joseph Mowers, Matthew Mowers, Leonardo Rese, Billy Roberts, Amy Rose, Shahil Shah, Pranav Sharma, Hongfei Sun, Bin Wang, Bharat Vyakaranam, Zhenyu (Henry) HuangKevin Harris, Chuan Qin, Nader Samaan, Marcelo Elizondo, Tony Nguyen, Quan Nguyen, Kishan Guddanti, Patrick Royer, Fernando Bereta dos Reis, Shahnawaz Siddiqui, Sameer Nekkalapu, Michael Abdelmalak

Research output: NRELTechnical Report

Abstract

The Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Study (AOSWTS) is part of the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) efforts to understand and facilitate the transmission of electricity from wind in the Atlantic Ocean. It was informed by the Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Literature Review and Gaps Analysis (Bothwell et al. 2021) and the convening workshops hosted in 2022-2023 by DOE and the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. The study results help to inform An Action Plan for Offshore Wind Transmission Development in the U.S. Atlantic Region (Baker et al. 2023). DOE's Wind Energy Technologies Office funded AOSWTS. The AOSWTS identifies and evaluates pathways to enable offshore wind energy deployment in the Atlantic Ocean through coordinated offshore transmission solutions in the near term (by 2030) and long term (by 2050). The study fills gaps in prior analyses by providing a multiregional planning perspective that evaluates offshore wind generation development with transmission planning. It incorporates environmental, ocean co-use, and other siting considerations into defining potential offshore transmission routes. The study also compares different multiregional offshore transmission topologies and their associated costs (using potential cable routes) and benefits (in terms of production cost savings and enhanced resource adequacy). In addition, the AOSWTS analyzes reliability impacts from a multiregional perspective. The study provides guidance for policymakers and transmission stakeholders on possible outcomes resulting from a proactive, coordinated, and interregional approach to transmission planning for offshore wind energy development in the Atlantic. While this study presents possibilities, additional work following system operator methods and procedures can help build on this analysis.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages19
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

See DOE/GO-102024-6116 for the full report

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/TP-5000-89304

Other Report Number

  • DOE/GO-102024-6217

Keywords

  • Atlantic
  • offshore
  • offshore wind
  • transmission
  • wind energy

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