Ørsted to develop offshore wind manufacturing hub to service East Coast
Skipjack Wind was proposed by Deepwater Wind, which Ørsted bought in October 2018. Ørsted committed to creating 1,400 jobs in the state, and the development of the staging area will add to the full-time jobs needed during construction and operation.
“This new center will create good-paying jobs, leverage Tradepoint Atlantic’s outstanding location and logistical assets, and put Maryland on the map as a global offshore wind industry hub,” Claus Møller, Chief Operating Office of Ørsted U.S. Offshore Wind, said in a statement.
Ground-bearing capacity at the port will need to be strengthened to enable the safe use of heavy-lift cranes or transporters for turbine components, which may weigh as much as 2,000 tons, according to the press release.
Ørsted, a Danish energy company, has developed offshore wind throughout Europe where heavy port infrastructure, originally created to support offshore drilling operations for oil and natural gas, already exists. The U.S. Atlantic Coast has seen the largest amount of interest in offshore wind development, but did not allow offshore drilling developments — therefore, the necessary manufacturing infrastructure needs to be installed.