Article, 2024

Maritime Security and the Wind: Threats and Risks to Offshore Renewable Energy Infrastructure

Ocean Yearbook Online, ISSN 0191-8575, 2211-6001, Volume 38, 1, Pages 433-458, 10.1163/22116001-03801017

Contributors

Bueger, Christian 0000-0002-4259-9299 [1] [2] Edmunds, Timothy 0000-0001-6755-628X [3]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Seychelles
  4. [NORA names: Seychelles; Africa];
  5. [3] University of Bristol
  6. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD]

Abstract

Offshore wind energy production has seen a significant expansion in recent years. With technologies rapidly improving and prices dropping, it is now one of the key instruments in the green energy transition. The implications of offshore wind farm expansion for maritime security and ocean governance have, so far, received sparse attention in the literature. This article offers one of the first thorough analyses of the security of offshore wind farms and related installations, such as underwater electricity cables, energy islands, and hydrogen plants. The technical vulnerabilities of wind farm systems is reviewed and threats from terrorism, crime and State hostilities, including physical and cyber risk scenarios, are discussed. The expansion of green offshore energy production must keep pace with the changing threat landscape that follows from it. Prospective solutions for the protection of wind farms systems, including surveillance, patrols and self-protection are discussed. The current repertoire of maritime security solutions is in many ways capable of dealing with the threats and risks effectively if adjusted accordingly. The analysis builds important new bridges between debates in energy security and maritime security, as well as the implications of climate change adaption and mitigation for security at sea.

Keywords

Maritime, adaptation, analysis, attention, bridge, cable, change adaptation, changing threat landscape, climate, climate change adaptation, crime, cyber, debates, electrical cables, energy, energy islands, energy production, energy security, energy transition, expansion, farm expansion, farming systems, farms, government, green energy transition, hostility, hydrogen, hydrogen plant, installation, instrument, islands, landscape, literature, maritime security, mitigation, ocean, ocean governance, offshore energy production, offshore wind energy production, offshore wind farms, patrol, plants, price, production, prospective solution, protection, repertoire, risk, risk scenarios, scenarios, sea, security, security solutions, self-protection, solution, state, state hostility, surveillance, system, technical vulnerabilities, technology, terrorism, threat, threat landscape, transition, wind, wind energy production, wind farm expansion, wind farm system, wind farms, years

Data Provider: Digital Science