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Equinor gets crucial United States approval for New york city offshore wind farm

U.S. authorities on Thursday provided Norway's Equinor approval to begin constructing a huge offshore wind farm off the coast of New York, a favorable milestone for a project that has faced skyrocketing costs and does not have a power supply agreement.

The plan approved by the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management consists of building and operation of both the Empire Wind 1 and Empire Wind 2 facilities, which could power more than 700,000 homes each year as soon as built.

We are ready to get to work, Molly Morris, president of Equinor Renewables Americas, said in a statement.

The overseas wind market is expected to play a key role in helping the U.S. and states including New york city fulfill their goals to decarbonize the power grid and battle climate change.

Equinor stated construction of Empire Wind is on track to start later this year, and the task could start delivering power to New York by 2026.

However initially, it needs to protect a contract. Empire Wind 1 last month sent a modified bid to supply power to New York state as part of a solicitation that enabled business to leave old agreements and re-offer at greater rates.

New York is expected to reveal contract awards in the coming weeks.

Equinor and others in the industry had actually sought new contract terms due to the fact that of rocketing building costs, greater interest rates and supply chain snags.

Empire Wind 2 is expected to be submitted in a future solicitation, Equinor has actually said.

(source: Reuters)