Business Headlines

Oil Services Find Hope in Giant Windmills Anchored to Ocean Bed

published Sep 21st 2016, 6:01 pm, by Joe Ryan

(Bloomberg) —
Gulf Island Fabrication Inc. has for decades built hulking platforms to extract oil and natural gas from the seabed. With the collapse of offshore drilling, the company has turned to helping harvest another energy resource: wind.

Gulf Island built all five turbine foundations for the first U.S. offshore wind farm, which is expected to go into service in November. Oil and gas services companies worked on almost every facet of Deepwater Wind LLC’s 30-megawatt project in Rhode Island, supplying engineers, deckhands, construction vessels and decades of expertise building massive structures at sea.

The 600-foot (183-meter) turbines represent a milestone for clean energy and an opportunity for fossil fuel companies. With more U.S. offshore wind farms in the works, Gulf Island and its peers say the nascent industry offers a new source of revenue to weather the volatile oil market. Cheap crude has long been seen as a barrier to renewable energy. Now those low prices are helping the wind industry grow.

“We see offshore wind as part of our future going forward,” said Roy P. Francis, senior vice president of business development at Houston-based Gulf Island, which has fabricated components for hundreds of oil rigs. “We chased this job for seven years.”

And there will be additional jobs to chase that could provide income for engineers and builders. With construction of the Block Island project completed in August, Deepwater’s next goal is a 90-megawatt wind farm off the eastern tip of Long Island that will power more than 50,000 homes. It’s one of two federally designated areas off New York for wind energy, and Governor Andrew Cuomo has said offshore turbines are a critical part of his goal of getting 50 percent of the state’s power from renewable sources by 2030.

The U.S. government laid out a plan this month to drive installation of 86,000 megawatts of offshore wind by 2050, and has awarded 11 leases to developers planning projects in the Atlantic. Massachusetts enacted in August a law requiring utilities to purchase 1,600 megawatts of offshore wind over the next 11 years.

It’s been a long time coming. Developers pushed for more than a decade to build wind farms off the U.S. coast. While the industry thrived in Europe with public subsidies, U.S. utilities balked at high power prices, inflated by the cost of building at sea.

Deepwater’s $300 million project, 3 miles (4.8 kilometers) southeast of Block Island, comes as a slump in oil and gas prices underpins a downturn in offshore drilling that’s led to dozens of bankruptcies and about 250,000 layoffs worldwide, according to the National Ocean Industries Association. Much of the work remaining for Gulf Coast service companies involves decommissioning offshore wells.

Getting Assistance

That paved the way for Deepwater to find space in fabrication yards and recruit vessels and crews to sail from the Gulf Coast, said Chief Executive Officer Jeff Grybowski.

“We certainly were helped by the oil downturn,” Grybowski said aboard a boat in Block Island Sound as workers prepared to hoist the final turbine blades into place. “It certainly made resources more available than they otherwise might have been.”

Executives at Gulf Island and other service companies working with Deepwater said they would have jumped at the opportunity, downturn or not. Oil has always been a boom-bust business, and companies are constantly looking for ways to diversify.

“We’ve been looking to do offshore wind for 10 years,” said Zachary Finucane, project manager for Keystone Engineering Inc. of Mandeville, Louisiana. The company has worked on offshore oil platforms for almost 30 years and designed foundations for the Block Island turbines.

Wind, Weather

Experience building offshore drilling platforms lends itself to offshore wind. Both entail anchoring colossal structures in hundreds of feet of water. That involves massive construction equipment, long supply chains and big components that are fabricated around the world and assembled at sea. Both tasks involve working amid waves, wind and unpredictable weather.

“You need to be very good at logistics,” said Even Larsen, CEO of Fred. Olsen Windcarrier AS, which sent a 15-story lift boat from the North Sea to hoist the Deepwater turbines into place.

European offshore gas companies began branching into wind more than a decade ago. Denmark’s Dong Energy A/S, formerly Danish Oil and Natural Gas, built the world’s first large-scale offshore wind farm in 2002 and is now the world’s biggest developer of wind farms at sea. Statoil ASA, the Norwegian fossil fuel giant, is leveraging experience with some of the world’s biggest offshore oil facilities to develop a floating wind farm off Scotland.

“We saw this was an opportunity to play on some of our strengths,” said Irene Rummelhoff, Statoil’s executive vice president of new energy solutions.

Offshore oil drilling was largely pioneered in the Gulf of Mexico, where engineers, mariners and others spent decades devising ways to cut costs and build platforms stronger and faster. Grybowski said he’s optimistic the companies can repeat that feat.

“They did it for oil,” Grybowski said. “And they will do it for wind.”

–With assistance from Jennifer A. Dlouhy.To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Ryan in New York at jryan173@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net Will Wade, Dan Stets
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© 2016 Bloomberg L.P

The Author

Walt Alexander

Walt Alexander

Walt Alexander is the editor-in-chief of Men of Value. Learn more about his vision for the online magazine for American men with the American values—faith, family & freedom—in his Welcome from the Editor.

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