A Global Alliance for Offshore Wind

GWEC, IRENA and Denmark launch a new global alliance for offshore wind to promote its adoption.

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A global alliance for offshore wind has been formed. Led by IRENA, GWEC and Denmark, its main mission will be to unlock the potential of offshore wind.

Massive promotion of offshore wind energy

The public event, held in New York, was an opportunity to present the Alliance’s ambitions and visions.

As a result, the Global Offshore Wind Alliance (GOWA) has set itself the challenge of increasing installed offshore wind capacity worldwide by 670%. This would increase from 57 GW in 2021 to 380 GW in 2030. The alliance intends to become a key catalyst for unlocking a resource that has a generating capacity of more than 71,000 GW worldwide.

For Danish Climate Minister Dan Jørgensen, international cooperation is a must:

“We can’t do it alone, but we need to work together in the public and private sectors, as well as across countries and regions. The Global Offshore Wind Alliance will be a platform to achieve this.”

Denmark, which initiated the alliance, is a pioneer in this field. In fact, since the 1970s, the country has been banking on the winds that sweep through it. Fifty years later, it has become the world’s per capita wind power champion. An experience that Dan Jørgensen wants to share:

“Denmark hosted the world’s first offshore wind farm in 1991. We have a lot of experience in this field and have long shared this experience with the rest of the world.”

The country will continue to invest in this area in order to do without Russian gas.

Fighting against global warming

The global alliance for offshore wind intends above all to meet climate objectives. Indeed, according to IRENA and IEA forecasts, 2,000 GW of installed offshore wind capacity are needed to reach the goal of limiting global temperatures to 1.5°C.

Laura Daniel-Davis, U.S. Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, notes that the goal set by the Paris agreement cannot be met without international cooperation:

“We recognize the value of global cooperation in offshore wind and the absolute necessity for every country to do its part in addressing the climate crisis.”

Moreover, in an extremely tense geopolitical context, investing in offshore wind turbines is a way to accelerate energy independence. A way forward for Francesco La Camera, Director General of IRENA:

“Energy security and the brutal energy crisis are forcing us to reassess our world. Offshore wind technology is the gateway to new sites tapping into significant wind resources.”

Representatives of the alliance also invited new partners from the public and private sectors to join. A cooperation that they wish to increase in order to create new partnerships.

Norway's energy regulator has rejected an application to build a wind farm in the northern Finnmark region due to potential environmental impacts and threats to Indigenous Sami culture.
Danish Ørsted has signed an agreement with Apollo to sell a 50% stake in its Hornsea 3 offshore wind farm in the UK, in a strategic transaction valued at approximately DKK 39 billion ($5.43bn).
Eneco takes over Prowind’s wind project development business in the Netherlands, adding 260 MW to its portfolio. Prowind refocuses on the German market, where demand is growing rapidly.
The Chinese wind turbine manufacturer and Saudi operator sign a seven-year framework agreement to deploy local production lines and enhance technological cooperation in several strategic markets.
Iberdrola has installed the high-voltage direct current converter station for its East Anglia THREE wind farm, marking a key milestone in a €5 billion project.
Driven by solid operational performance, Nordex has raised its 2025 EBITDA margin forecast to 7.5–8.5%, up from the previous 5–7%, following a significant improvement in preliminary third-quarter results.
Neoen’s Goyder South Wind Farm reaches full generation capacity, strengthening the French group’s presence in Australia’s energy market with 412 MW connected to the grid.
The Australian government has granted environmental approval for the 108 MW Waddi Wind Farm, a Tilt Renewables project with construction costs exceeding $400mn.
The 180 MW Nimbus wind project enters its final phase of construction in Arkansas, with commercial operation scheduled for early 2026.
Faced with market uncertainty in Europe, Siemens Gamesa pauses a planned industrial investment in Esbjerg, highlighting structural difficulties in the offshore wind sector.
Institutional deadlock in France delays tenders and weakens the offshore wind sector, triggering job cuts and major industrial withdrawals from the market.
The Lithuanian energy group has signed a EUR 318 million financing agreement for its 314 MW wind project, the largest in the Baltic states.
German group BayWa r.e. has tasked Enercoop Bretagne with implementing a citizen investment scheme for its planned wind farm in Plouisy, aiming for shared governance and stronger local involvement.
US wind capacity fell in Q2, but developers anticipate a sharp increase by late 2025, with 46 GW of new capacity forecast by 2029 and a peak in 2027.
Engie has signed a renewable electricity supply contract with Apple covering 173 MW of installed capacity in Italy, with commissioning scheduled between 2026 and 2027.
Renova a soumis une méthodologie d’évaluation environnementale pour un projet éolien terrestre de 280MW à Higashidori, renforçant son positionnement sur les technologies renouvelables au Japon.
The joint venture between BP and JERA ends its offshore wind ambitions in the United States, citing an unfavourable economic and regulatory environment for continuing the development of the Beacon Wind project.
With a 300 MW partnership signed with Nadara, Q ENERGY exceeds 1 GW of wind repowering projects in France, reinforcing its position in a market driven by public investment dynamics.
The acquisition of Cosmic Group by FairWind consolidates its position in Australia and marks a strategic expansion into New Zealand and Japan.
Danish manufacturer Vestas has paused construction of its planned facility in Poland, originally set for 2026, citing weaker-than-expected European offshore wind demand.

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