Offshore wind turbines at sea at sunset for an article about offshore wind capacity

The U.S. surpasses 100 GW of offshore wind capacity for the first time

Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.

For the first time in its history, the United States has crossed the 100 gigawatt threshold for offshore wind capacity — a milestone that took two decades of turbulent development, political reversals, and supply chain crises to reach, and that now places the country among the world’s leading offshore wind nations. The achievement, confirmed this week by the U.S. Department of Energy, marks the culmination of a buildout that began in earnest in the mid-2020s and accelerated through the 2030s and 2040s as costs fell, ports were modernized, and state-level procurement targets created a durable market.

Key projections

  • Offshore wind capacity: The U.S. reached 100 GW of installed offshore wind, up from just 174 MW in early 2025 C.E. — a roughly 575-fold increase over two decades.
  • Jobs and investment: The sector now supports an estimated 190,000 jobs in manufacturing, construction, operations, and supply chain — close to the 200,000 projected by early industry analysts — and has driven more than $60 billion in annual investment.
  • Clean power output: At full capacity, 100 GW of offshore wind can generate enough electricity to power approximately 38 million American homes, displacing hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year.

How the U.S. got here

In early 2025 C.E., the story of American offshore wind was largely one of unfulfilled promise. Only 174 MW of capacity sat in the water — a rounding error against the country’s energy needs. The development pipeline had swelled to more than 80,000 MW, growing by 53% in a single year, but projects faced cancellations, legal challenges, and supply chain bottlenecks that made timelines feel perpetually out of reach.

The turn came gradually. Analysts at Wood Mackenzie had projected just 5.9 GW online by 2029 C.E. and roughly 14 GW by 2030 C.E. Those forecasts proved roughly accurate, though the pace of deployment in the early 2030s outstripped most models. Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind came fully online in 2026 C.E., delivering up to 9.5 million megawatt-hours per year to the grid. Revolution Wind followed. The Gulf of Mexico, with infrastructure inherited from the oil and gas industry, emerged as a surprising hub for floating turbines.

Eleven states had established offshore wind procurement targets totaling 84 GW. Those commitments, combined with long-term contracts that gave manufacturers and lenders the certainty they needed, allowed the supply chain to finally scale. Turbine assembly facilities opened in ports from Baltimore to Brownsville. Specialized installation vessels, once a chokepoint, were built domestically under new maritime investment programs.

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory had estimated the country’s technical offshore wind potential at more than 4,200 GW — more than three times total U.S. energy demand. Reaching 100 GW means the country has tapped less than 2.5% of what is physically possible.

Floating wind opens the western coast

Perhaps the most consequential development of the past decade has been the commercial maturation of floating offshore wind technology. Fixed-bottom turbines require shallow coastal waters. Floating platforms can operate in depths where fixed structures are impractical — unlocking an estimated 400 GW of potential off the Pacific coast alone.

The first commercial-scale floating wind arrays off the coasts of Oregon and California came online in the late 2030s C.E., opening an entirely new frontier. Indigenous fishing communities and environmental groups in the region had mixed initial reactions, and negotiations over siting, cultural resource protections, and revenue sharing shaped how projects moved forward. Those consultations, while sometimes slow, produced frameworks that other regions have since adopted.

This reflects a broader pattern in the offshore wind buildout. The Global Wind Energy Council had projected that global offshore wind capacity would nearly triple between 2024 C.E. and 2030 C.E., from 83 GW to 238 GW. The U.S. was late to that initial wave, but the country’s sheer coastline scale means it is now one of the defining forces in where the industry goes next. The milestone also connects to a wider shift that has been building for years: as renewables now make up nearly half of global power capacity, offshore wind is becoming one of the central pillars of that transition.

What still needs solving

The 100 GW milestone is real, but it doesn’t resolve every tension. Grid integration remains an active challenge: moving power from offshore arrays to inland demand centers requires transmission infrastructure that has lagged behind generation capacity in several regions. Permitting timelines, while improved from the chaotic mid-2020s C.E., still routinely stretch longer than developers want.

Ecological monitoring continues as well. The effect of large-scale offshore wind development on marine ecosystems — including migratory fish, whales, and seabirds — is an area of ongoing research, and environmental advocates have pushed for adaptive management requirements that adjust operations based on observed impacts. Some of those conflicts remain unresolved.

Coastal communities that were once dependent on fossil fuel infrastructure have benefited unevenly from the transition. Port cities that secured manufacturing contracts have seen genuine economic uplift. Others, particularly in areas without deep-water port access, have seen fewer of the promised jobs. The DOE’s 2024 Offshore Wind Market Report flagged this equity gap early, and it has remained a policy priority — though progress has been uneven.

There are also parallels worth drawing across ocean contexts. The hard-won lessons of marine conservation — like those embedded in projects such as Ghana’s Cape Three Points marine protected area — show that offshore development and ocean stewardship can reinforce each other when communities are brought into decisions from the start.

What comes next

State targets now total over 115,000 MW of offshore wind procurement commitments by 2050 C.E. The U.S. has just crossed 100 GW. That gap — roughly 15,000 MW still sought beyond what’s installed — suggests the buildout is far from over.

The DOE has outlined a pathway to 86,000 MW by 2050 C.E. under conservative scenarios. Under more ambitious ones, with floating wind fully deployed and grid infrastructure built to match, the number could be significantly higher. The resource potential is not the constraint. The constraints are permitting, transmission, supply chain, and political will — the same forces that slowed the first 100 GW.

For now, the 100 GW mark stands as something rare in American energy history: a hard target, once thought distant, that actually arrived. Read more about ongoing renewable energy milestones in the Good News for Humankind archive.

Read more

For more on this story, see: U.S. Department of Energy — Offshore Wind Energy

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