Gone with the Wind? Wind Farm-Induced Wakes and Regulatory Gaps
24 Pages Posted: 20 Dec 2022
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Gone with the Wind? Wind Farm-Induced Wakes and Regulatory Gaps
Gone with the Wind? Wind Farm-Induced Wakes and Regulatory Gaps
Date Written: December 6, 2022
Abstract
Wind farm-induced wakes can propagate dozens of kilometres, decreasing the power production and the fatigue lifetime of wind turbines in neighbour farms. This phenomenon, termed hereinafter “wind theft”, may lead to legal conflicts between wind farm operators and even States. Wind theft can substantially slow down the development of offshore wind if it is not regulated by a clear legal framework. In the present study, the case of Sørlige Nordsjø II, a large offshore area that opened for wind turbine licensing application in 2020, is explored. This area is located in the Norwegian exclusive economic zone (EEZ), at the border with the Danish equivalent zone. Usingstate-of-the-art reanalysis data covering 1992 to 2020, it is shown that long farm-induced wake will likely propagate regularly from SN2 into the Danish EEZ and vice versa. This is a worrying sign as the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention 1982 leaves a regulatory gap regarding wind theft. As Europe crucially needs to expand its renewable energy production and work towards its net zero objectives by 2050, coastal States should cooperate to find regulatory solutions to wind theft such that wind resource management can be optimised. While some North Sea coastal States demonstrate a political will to cooperate, it is crucial that such policies proliferate into legal instruments which lend certainty and predictability to wind resource management.
Keywords: Offshore Wind, Renewable Energy, Wind Theft, Marine Governance, Natural Resource Management
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