Offshore wind turbines, for article on offshore wind tender

Denmark plans massive 10GW offshore wind tender to insure against “Putin’s black gas”

Denmark has opened the largest offshore wind tender in its history, offering a minimum of 6 gigawatts of new capacity across six wind farms — with an overplanting option that could push total output to 10 GW or more. The Danish Energy Agency published the tender covering areas in the North Sea, Kattegat, Kriegers Flak II, and Hesselø, with all minimum capacity required to be online before the end of 2030 C.E.

At a glance

  • Offshore wind tender: Denmark’s new auction covers six wind farm sites and guarantees at least 6 GW of new capacity, with market freedom to install as much as 10 GW or more in most areas.
  • Green hydrogen production: Power from the new farms will serve domestic consumption, neighboring countries, and the production of hydrogen and green fuels for ships and planes.
  • Recyclable wind turbine blades: The tender requires the use of recyclable blades — a new sustainability standard — unless a market analysis finds it would delay commissioning of the full 6 GW by the 2030 deadline.

Why Denmark is moving now

The timing is deliberate. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine exposed how dependent Europe had become on fossil gas, and Denmark’s government framed this tender explicitly as a hedge against that vulnerability.

“Finally, we are able to publish the biggest offshore wind tender in Danish history,” said Lars Aagaard, Denmark’s Minister for Climate, Energy, and Utilities. “With hundreds of wind turbines, we are insuring ourselves against Putin’s black gas, and as of today Denmark is one large step closer to becoming Europe’s green power house.”

Denmark currently operates about 2.7 GW of offshore wind capacity. The new tender, if fully built out, would more than triple that figure — and then some. When complete, the farms are projected to cover all of Denmark’s domestic electricity consumption with renewable power, while still leaving surplus for export and fuel production.

How the auction works

Unlike many renewable energy auctions, these projects will be built without state subsidies. Instead, developers bid a yearly concession payment to the Danish state for the right to use the seabed over a 30-year period. The Danish state will also hold a 20 percent minority ownership stake in each farm.

That structure shifts the financial risk toward the market while keeping a public share of the long-term revenue — an approach that has drawn attention from other European governments watching Denmark’s model closely.

Each 1 GW wind farm is expected to require around DKK 16 billion (roughly EUR 2.14 billion) in capital investment and approximately 9,500 workers, based on 2020 market estimates. Across the full 6 GW minimum, that implies tens of thousands of jobs in construction, manufacturing, and operations.

Environmental requirements built in

The tender goes further than most on environmental conditions. Two farms — one in the North Sea and one in Kattegat — will require what the agency calls a “nature inclusive design,” meaning developers must demonstrate a net positive impact on the marine environment and biodiversity, not just mitigation of harm.

All developers will be required to monitor ecosystem effects throughout the project’s life. The recyclable blade requirement is a first for Danish offshore wind tenders, reflecting growing pressure on the industry to address end-of-life waste from turbine components.

These requirements are meaningful, though not without complexity. Scaling up offshore wind at this pace brings real challenges — supply chain pressure, marine habitat disruption during construction, and grid integration costs that don’t always appear in the headline numbers. Denmark has committed to monitoring, but the long-term ecological outcomes will depend on how rigorously those conditions are enforced.

A model for European energy security

Denmark has long been a global leader in wind energy, and this tender is designed to extend that lead while serving a broader regional purpose. The International Energy Agency has noted that expanding domestic renewables is now central to Europe’s energy security strategy, and Denmark’s approach — combining scale, market mechanisms, and environmental conditions — offers a working template.

The tender follows a political agreement on financial frameworks for hydrogen infrastructure reached in early April 2024 C.E., linking the wind buildout directly to Denmark’s emerging hydrogen economy. Green hydrogen produced from offshore wind could eventually displace fossil fuels in hard-to-electrify sectors like aviation and shipping — industries that have few other near-term decarbonization pathways.

Aagaard was direct about the scale of ambition: “It is projects of this scale that can make a big, green difference for the climate and our security. Not just for Denmark, but for all of Europe.”

The Danish Energy Agency has set the 2030 commissioning deadline as a hard requirement for the minimum 6 GW. Whether the market takes up the overplanting option — and how far beyond 10 GW it might push — will depend on grid capacity, technology costs, and how aggressively developers move through permitting. Wind Europe’s latest data suggests European offshore capacity is growing, but permitting bottlenecks remain a persistent drag across the continent, including in Denmark.

Still, the launch of the tender itself is a concrete step — one that turns a political agreement into an active market process, with real deadlines, real money, and real consequences for Europe’s energy future.

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For more on this story, see: Offshore Wind Biz

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