'Leadership and innovation': Ventus Awards cheers ascendant US offshore wind sector

Inaugural event held in Washington, DC by the Business Network for Offshore Wind with partner Recharge to promote excellence in rapidly growing industry

. Ventus awards winners.
. Ventus awards winners.Foto: Business Network for Offshore Wind

The US offshore wind industry gathered for the inaugural Ventus Awards gala in Washington, DC to celebrate the US offshore wind industry’s accomplishments, milestones, and the individuals, companies, and organisations leading the charge.

Launched by the sector advocacy body the Business Network for Offshore Wind (BNOW) in collaboration with Recharge and hosted by BNOW CEO Liz Burdock and Recharge Editor-in-Chief Darius Snieckus, the gala celebration was attended by hundreds of industry associates from the developers and utilities to established suppliers and budding start-ups.

“The Ventus Awards gala is the first offshore wind industry celebration of the creativity, leadership, and innovation that has brought the industry to where it is today,” said Burdock. “I congratulate the ten winners of the inaugural Ventus Awards. Together, we are building a strong and resilient offshore wind industry to benefit our economy, workforce, and environment.”

The Ventus Awards honour the entire sweep of the burgeoning US offshore wind industry, recognising both its history and trailblazers, ranging from developers Dominion Energy and Orsted, through pioneers Bill Heronemus, founder of MIT’s Center for Ocean Energy Research, and Larry Viterna, CEO of floating wind outfit Nautica, to the new generation of leaders, with Next-Gen Leadership award going to Alana Duerr of Simply Blue. (See panel below for the full list of winners and nominees.)

“The winners of this year’s inaugural Ventus Awards – and indeed those on the shortlists – are embodiments of the pioneering spirit and purpose that is driving offshore wind forward as an engine of the energy transition in the US and globally,” said Snieckus.

“I am certain that in years to come they will inspire many others in this rapidly evolving industry to think and act with vision and ambition, to believe, in Ben Franklin’s words, that ‘energy and persistence conquer all things’.”

The Ventus Awards topped off a stellar day for the industry, which also saw the groundbreaking of the US’ first commercial scale wind farm, Vineyard Wind 1, in Massachusetts. The 800MW project jointly owned by Iberdrola’s Avangrid and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners is now officially underway and set to begin feeding power into the grid in 2023. Vineyard Wind was nominated for three Ventus Awards.

The Build Back Better bill also passed the US House of Representatives today and is set to go before the Senate. The bill will include long-term clean energy tax credits for manufacturing and development, funding for transmission projects and planning, assistance to rebuild ports, and will advance offshore wind in the South Atlantic and US territories.

The US pipeline of offshore wind projects has bulged to some 35GW, according to the 2021 US Offshore Wind Market Report published by the Department of Energy, setting off a frenzy of competition recently among turbine suppliers.

The Biden administration is looking to the offshore wind sector to install as much as 30GW of new sea-based plant, chiefly in the waters off the eastern seabord, by 2030, as part its wider national decarbonisation plans.
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Published 20 November 2021, 02:27Updated 20 November 2021, 02:43
BNOWLiz BurdockOrstedDominion EnergySimply Blue Energy