The Anonymous Widower

Offshore Wind Could Help Create ‘Electric Shipping Highway’ Across Europe, Study Says

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Offshore wind farms, energy islands, ports and proposed “Offshore Power Zones” could together form the foundation of an integrated maritime energy system capable of supporting large-scale vessel electrification across Northern Europe, according to a study by Maersk’s Stillstrom, Baltic Energy Island and the Port of Roenne.

This is a map from the report.

Note.

  1. In Investment in Grain LNG, I talked about Centrica and Grain LNG Terminal, Centrica’s plans for the terminal, which include bunkering.
  2. London Gateway and Immingham are two substantial ports on the East side of England.

Are English ports, except for the notable exception of Felixstowe, not shown on the map, because of Brexit?

These two paragraphs add some detail.

According to the findings, it is estimated that around 37,000 cargo vessels pass Bornholm each year, consuming approximately 3 million tonnes of marine fuel and emitting around 10 million tonnes of CO₂ annually. Full electrification of this traffic is estimated to require about 17 TWh of electricity per year, potentially replacing roughly EUR 2 billion in fossil fuel imports with domestically generated renewable power.

The whitepaper also introduces the concept of Offshore Power Zones (OPZs), developed by Stillstrom, which involves vessels accessing offshore wind-generated electricity at sea for battery charging or hotel loads. The report sees these zones linked with electrified ports to form an “electric shipping highway” stretching from the English Channel through the North Sea into the Baltic Sea.

Note that Bornholm  is between Sweden and Germany.

 

 

June 16, 2026 - Posted by | Energy, Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

1 Comment »

  1. I gather that the UK hijacked a ship in the straights of Dover because they did not like the flag it was flying.

    Comment by Ben Oldfield | June 16, 2026 | Reply


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