A view of the turbines at Orsted's offshore wind farm near Nysted, Denmark, September 4, 2023.
Orsted, the world's largest offshore wind developer, said in August it may see impairments of 16 billion Danish crowns ($2.3 billion) on its U.S. offshore developments due to supply chain problems, soaring interest rates and a lack of new tax credits.
Norway's Equinor (EQNR.OL), BP's partner on those New York offshore wind developments, booked a $300 million impairment on the projects on Friday.
In Massachusetts, two offshore wind developers, SouthCoast Wind and Commonwealth Wind, agreed to pay local utilities to terminate deals that would have delivered around 2,400 MW of energy.
Avangrid also canceled a contract to sell power in Connecticut from its proposed 804-MW Park City offshore wind farm.
Persons:
Tom Little, Denmark's, Joe Biden, Orsted, Jacob Pedersen, Portugal, France's, Avangrid, Scott DiSavino, Louise Breusch Rasmussen, Ron Bousso, Jonathan Oatis, Josie Kao
Organizations:
REUTERS, BP, U.S, Analysts, Reuters, Commonwealth, Shell, Energias, Thomson
Locations:
Nysted, Denmark, U.S, Danish, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, In Massachusetts, Commonwealth, Spanish, Copenhagen, London, Bengaluru