Gulf of Mexico Offshore Wind Transmission

The Gulf of Mexico Offshore Wind Transmission project examines opportunities and challenges for transmitting offshore wind energy in the Gulf of Mexico to customers on land.

Close-up of offshore wind turbine blades

The Gulf of Mexico represents 37% of the country's total offshore wind energy potential and could provide a reliable, clean source of energy to customers in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. The ability to effectively and efficiently connect offshore wind energy resources to end users in the Gulf of Mexico requires coordinated transmission planning to ensure that electric transmission facilities can adequately support future offshore development. Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Wind Energy Technologies Office and Grid Deployment Office, NREL researchers published a report—Gulf of Mexico Offshore Wind Transmission Literature Review and Gaps Analysis: Environmental Considerations, Community Readiness, and Infrastructure—that examines the current literature to gather information and identify gaps.

Through this research, the team identified several key factors that could influence transmission planning. These include:

  • Multiple, conflicting uses for specific ocean sites
  • Ability to repurpose existing energy infrastructure
  • The evolving energy landscape of the Gulf.

The project complements other research in the offshore wind transmission space, including:

Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Literature Review and Gaps Analysis, DOE Technical Report (2021)

Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Study, NREL Technical Report (2024)

West Coast Offshore Wind Transmission Literature Review and Gaps Analysis, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Technical Report (2023)

West Coast Offshore Wind Transmission Study, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Atlantic Offshore Wind Transmission Plan, DOE (2024).

The report builds on the research mentioned above by compiling information on environmental considerations, community readiness, and infrastructure needs and identifying knowledge gaps that need to be filled to advance regional transmission planning work in the Gulf of Mexico.

Key Findings

The Gulf of Mexico Offshore Wind Transmission Literature Review and Gaps Analysis: Environmental, Community Readiness, and Infrastructure report summarizes currently available information on available infrastructure, environmental factors, and community readiness as related to offshore wind energy transmission planning in the Gulf of Mexico. In the report, the authors state that:

  • Prior to this effort, researchers had not studied offshore wind energy transmission in the Gulf of Mexico—this research is needed to inform regional transmission planning and adequately meet regional and future energy needs.
  • The oil and gas industry already has infrastructure and workers positioned in the Gulf of Mexico; new offshore wind energy projects could be supported through shared transmission systems and workforce.
  • Future transmission planning must consider the Gulf of Mexico's highly productive ecosystem, diverse coastal communities, considerable existing infrastructure, and heavy industrial foundation.
  • Transmission solutions should be tailored to regional environmental concerns to minimize impacts to wildlife, habitat, and coastal resources.
  • Transmission projects should include local communities in their planning efforts.

Overall, the researchers found that transmission projects will require collaborative, coordinated planning across multiple diverse groups, including federal, Tribal, state, and local entities, to ensure new projects help meet evolving decarbonization and clean energy goals.

Contacts

Angel McCoy

Senior Offshore Wind Regulatory Specialist

angel.mccoy@nrel.gov
303-384-7623

Lanaia Carveth

Project Manager

Lanaia.Carveth@nrel.gov
303-384-7846

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