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The offshore wind industry had its best year on record in 2021, adding 21.
1 GW
of offshore wind throughout the year.
This success, coupled with national development plans around offshore wind, has raised its outlook for 2030 by 16.
7% to 45 GW of annual additions, bringing the total installed capacity to 316 GW
.
According to the development plans of various countries, from 2025, the annual increase is expected to continue to set new records
.
In 2021, China accounted for 80% of the world's new offshore wind capacity, bringing its cumulative offshore wind capacity to 27.
7 GW
.
By the end of 2022, Asia will be the world's largest offshore market; Europe may not regain this status
until 2031.
The share of offshore wind in global wind installations will grow from 23% in 2021 to 30%
in 2031.
At the same time, floating wind energy has also moved from the demonstration stage to the pre-commercial stage, with 57 MW of new installed capacity worldwide
.
In order to reach the 380 GW target by 2030, a huge effort will be required to translate these ambitions into action
.
Governments, industry and other stakeholders must work together to ensure that subsea concessions are licensed at the right pace, that planning processes are streamlined and efficiency is improved, and that procurement schemes such as auctions provide sustainable prices that recognize the systemic and societal value
of offshore wind.
In addition, the offshore wind industry is expected to become one of the most important guardians of
the world's oceans.
It is critical
that the industry recognizes that with expected growth comes more responsibility.
The offshore wind industry had its best year on record in 2021, adding 21.
1 GW
of offshore wind throughout the year.
This success, coupled with national development plans around offshore wind, has raised its outlook for 2030 by 16.
7% to 45 GW of annual additions, bringing the total installed capacity to 316 GW
.
According to the development plans of various countries, from 2025, the annual increase is expected to continue to set new records
.
In 2021, China accounted for 80% of the world's new offshore wind capacity, bringing its cumulative offshore wind capacity to 27.
7 GW
.
By the end of 2022, Asia will be the world's largest offshore market; Europe may not regain this status
until 2031.
The share of offshore wind in global wind installations will grow from 23% in 2021 to 30%
in 2031.
At the same time, floating wind energy has also moved from the demonstration stage to the pre-commercial stage, with 57 MW of new installed capacity worldwide
.
In order to reach the 380 GW target by 2030, a huge effort will be required to translate these ambitions into action
.
Governments, industry and other stakeholders must work together to ensure that subsea concessions are licensed at the right pace, that planning processes are streamlined and efficiency is improved, and that procurement schemes such as auctions provide sustainable prices that recognize the systemic and societal value
of offshore wind.
In addition, the offshore wind industry is expected to become one of the most important guardians of
the world's oceans.
It is critical
that the industry recognizes that with expected growth comes more responsibility.