Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power

Wind power is the fastest growing sector of electricity generation in the world and the development of offshore wind resources is an increasingly important component of this growth. While more than 1.5GW have been installed in Europe and China, no turbines have been installed in United States water...

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Main Author: McDaniel Wyman, Constance Annette
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/24652
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-246522015-09-20T17:23:23ZTechnical and economic analysis of US offshore wind powerMcDaniel Wyman, Constance AnnetteOffshore windOffshore wind powerOffshore wind electricityOffshore wind generationOffshore wind costOffshore wind technicalWind power is the fastest growing sector of electricity generation in the world and the development of offshore wind resources is an increasingly important component of this growth. While more than 1.5GW have been installed in Europe and China, no turbines have been installed in United States waters even though several have been planned. Offshore wind power development in the United States must contend with significant challenges. There are numerous technical considerations including geological issues and undefined environmental conditions that affect the determination of appropriate design loads. Technological advancements are needed, and logistical questions must be addressed. The regulatory structure can be confusing and most permitting frameworks are not well established. Offshore wind projects are capital intensive and concerns exist that the industry will not be able to achieve a suitable economy of scale. Additionally, concerns about offshore wind impacts cross many areas such as the environment, visual and cultural concerns, navigational issues, and competing uses. This research project examines the technical issues of American offshore wind power and models basic project costs to provide an estimate of the total net present value for hypothetical utility-scale offshore wind projects in the United States. Costs have been examined by building a cost model and employing traditional cash flow analysis, regression, design of experiments, and random sampling techniques.text2014-06-11T15:14:24Z2011-052014-06-06May 20112014-06-11T15:14:25ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/24652
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Offshore wind
Offshore wind power
Offshore wind electricity
Offshore wind generation
Offshore wind cost
Offshore wind technical
spellingShingle Offshore wind
Offshore wind power
Offshore wind electricity
Offshore wind generation
Offshore wind cost
Offshore wind technical
McDaniel Wyman, Constance Annette
Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
description Wind power is the fastest growing sector of electricity generation in the world and the development of offshore wind resources is an increasingly important component of this growth. While more than 1.5GW have been installed in Europe and China, no turbines have been installed in United States waters even though several have been planned. Offshore wind power development in the United States must contend with significant challenges. There are numerous technical considerations including geological issues and undefined environmental conditions that affect the determination of appropriate design loads. Technological advancements are needed, and logistical questions must be addressed. The regulatory structure can be confusing and most permitting frameworks are not well established. Offshore wind projects are capital intensive and concerns exist that the industry will not be able to achieve a suitable economy of scale. Additionally, concerns about offshore wind impacts cross many areas such as the environment, visual and cultural concerns, navigational issues, and competing uses. This research project examines the technical issues of American offshore wind power and models basic project costs to provide an estimate of the total net present value for hypothetical utility-scale offshore wind projects in the United States. Costs have been examined by building a cost model and employing traditional cash flow analysis, regression, design of experiments, and random sampling techniques. === text
author McDaniel Wyman, Constance Annette
author_facet McDaniel Wyman, Constance Annette
author_sort McDaniel Wyman, Constance Annette
title Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
title_short Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
title_full Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
title_fullStr Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
title_full_unstemmed Technical and economic analysis of US offshore wind power
title_sort technical and economic analysis of us offshore wind power
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/24652
work_keys_str_mv AT mcdanielwymanconstanceannette technicalandeconomicanalysisofusoffshorewindpower
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