Offshore wind turbines generate electricity by converting the energy from rotating turbine blades into electrical energy. The main components of offshore wind turbines include rotor blades, a tower to raise the rotor above the water, a nacelle hub that houses the generator and other key components, and a foundation that stabilizes the structure in the water. Offshore wind farms require additional infrastructure to transport generated energy through undersea cables to transformers and power substations before electricity can be supplied to consumers (Figure 1). To optimize performance, offshore turbines often use advanced control systems (e.g., yaw, pitch, and safety sensors).
Deploy Offshore Wind Turbines

Offshore wind turbines are ocean-based machines that harness natural wind to generate electricity. These turbines use the relatively strong winds over the water to rotate their blades, which power a generator to make electricity. The electricity travels through underwater cables to reach the land. There are two main types: fixed-bottom turbines, which are attached to the seabed in shallow waters (typically up to 60 meters deep), and floating turbines, which sit on platforms anchored in deeper waters. Offshore wind farms can produce more electricity than land-based wind farms because ocean winds are usually stronger and steadier than winds on land.
Deploying additional offshore wind turbines reduces CO₂ emissions by increasing the availability of renewable energy sources to meet electricity demand, therefore reducing dependence on fossil fuel-based sources in the overall electricity grid mix.
Solution Basics
MW installed capacity
Climate Impact
CO₂ , CH₄, N₂O, BC
Additional Benefits
Overview
Offshore wind turbines are often placed far from the coast to avoid causing noise pollution or taking up space on land. Foundations can be fixed to the seafloor (fixed-bottom) or floating depending on water depth and other characteristics, such as seabed topography and operational logistics (Afridi et al., 2024). Most offshore wind turbines operating in 2023 were fixed-bottom and limited to seafloor depths around 50 meters. Floating wind farms access wind resources over deeper waters, up to 1,000 meters (de La Beaumelle et al., 2023).
Wind speeds over water are generally higher and more consistent than over land, which allows for more reliable and increased electricity generation. Potential power generated from offshore wind turbines is directly proportional to the swept area of the rotor blades and the wind speed cubed; a doubling of wind speed corresponds to an eightfold increase in power (U.S. Energy Information Administration [U.S. EIA], 2024). The maximum electrical power a turbine can generate is its capacity in MW. The average installed offshore wind turbine rating grew from 7.7 MW in 2022 to 9.7 MW in 2023 (McCoy et al., 2024), with the total global installed capacity reaching 75.2 gigawatts (GW) in 2023 (Global Wind Energy Council [GWEC], 2024).
The global weighted average capacity factor for offshore wind turbines has reached 41% (International Renewable Energy Agency [IRENA], 2024c) – an increase from 38% a decade earlier – driven by advancements in turbine efficiency, hub height, rotor diameter, and siting optimization. Our analysis assumed an offshore wind turbine capacity factor of 41% (IRENA, 2024c). Offshore wind capacity varies across regions due to differences in policy support, coastal geography, water depths, and infrastructure readiness. Electric power output can be converted to energy generated by multiplying capacity by the time interval and the capacity factor. For annual generation, we multiply by 8,760 hours for one year.
The main siting considerations for offshore wind farms are distance from shore and water depth, but energy output can also be impacted by atmospheric wind conditions as well as the configuration of turbines within a wind farm (de La Beaumelle et al., 2023; IRENA, 2024c). Protected areas are also excluded during siting.
Since wind is a clean and renewable resource, offshore wind turbines do not contribute to GHG emissions or air pollution while generating energy. There are emissions associated with the manufacturing and transportation of turbine components. For this assessment, we did not quantify emissions during the construction of offshore wind farms; these emissions can be addressed with industry-sector solution assessments. Increased deployment of offshore wind turbines contributes to reduced CO₂ emissions when it reduces the need for electricity generation from fossil fuels.
Impact Calculator
Effectiveness
Adoption
Climate Impact
Maps
Offshore wind energy is most promising in coastal regions with high wind resources and the physical and regulatory capacity to support utility-scale deployment. It is particularly valuable for countries with limited land availability or high coastal population density, offering a scalable and increasingly cost-effective pathway toward decarbonization. Offshore wind’s effectiveness is underpinned by its strong technical fundamentals, especially its relatively high capacity factor.
We estimated global offshore wind technical potential at around 62,000,000 MW. Notably, more than 70% of the technical potential lies in waters deeper than 50 meters. As of 2023, global installed offshore wind capacity had reached 73 GW, a nearly 20-fold increase since 2010. Europe and Asia account for nearly equal shares of current capacity. Europe remains a global leader with around 30 GW, led by the United Kingdom, Germany, Denmark, and Netherlands.
In Asia, China dominates the offshore wind space, with more than 30 GW installed and annual additions of nearly 17 GW in 2021 alone. Japan has set targets of 10 GW by 2030 and 30–45 GW by 2040, while South Korea aims for 14.3 GW by 2030 (IRENA, 2024a). The United States has vast offshore wind potential, with NREL estimating 1,476 GW for fixed‑bottom and 2,773 GW for floating installations (Lopez et al., 2022). The United States is beginning to scale up offshore wind through policy support from the Inflation Reduction Act, and large-scale projects are now under development along the East Coast. As of May 31, 2024, the country had 174 MW of offshore wind capacity installed (McCoy et al., 2024). While this installed capacity remains modest compared to Europe or China, it represents an initial step in building the domestic industry. Importantly, the U.S. offshore wind project development and operational pipeline exceeds 80,000 MW, highlighting the scale of development expected in the coming decade. Canada, with 9.3 TW of technical potential (7.2 TW of which is suitable for floating wind), has begun leasing processes in Nova Scotia targeting 5 GW by 2030 and integrating offshore wind into its green hydrogen strategy, while Australia’s Victoria state aims for 9 GW by 2040 (IRENA, 2024a).
Several emerging markets represent strong opportunities for future deployment. Brazil has more than 1,200 GW of estimated technical potential and is currently developing a national framework for offshore wind licensing. India plans to reach 37 GW by 2030, with auctions for 7.2 GW already scheduled (IRENA, 2024a). Other countries such as Vietnam and South Africa are beginning to position themselves as offshore wind markets (IRENA, 2024a).
Technical potential for offshore wind
Highlighted areas are suitable for offshore wind development for fixed turbines (those fixed to the seafloor, typically in waters less than 50 meters deep) and floating turbines (those anchored on platforms in waters less than 1,000 meters deep).
Energy Sector Management Assistant Program & The World Bank Group (2021). Global offshore wind technical potential (version 3) [Data set]. The World Bank Group. Link to source: https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/search/dataset/0037787
Technical potential for offshore wind
Highlighted areas are suitable for offshore wind development for fixed turbines (those fixed to the seafloor, typically in waters less than 50 meters deep) and floating turbines (those anchored on platforms in waters less than 1,000 meters deep).
Energy Sector Management Assistant Program & The World Bank Group (2021). Global offshore wind technical potential (version 3) [Data set]. The World Bank Group. Link to source: https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/search/dataset/0037787
The Details
Current State
Effectiveness
Based on data provided by the International Energy Agency (IEA), global emissions from electricity generation accounted for an estimated 530 kg CO₂‑eq /MWh (540 kg CO₂‑eq /MWh, 20-yr basis). To convert from MWh to MW, we used the global weighted average capacity factor for offshore wind turbines of 41% (IRENA, 2024c). We estimated offshore wind turbines to reduce 1,900 t CO₂‑eq /MW (1,900 t CO₂‑eq /MW, 20-yr basis) of installed capacity annually (Table 1).
Table 1. Effectiveness at reducing emissions.
Unit: t CO₂‑eq /MW installed capacity/yr, 100-yr basis
Estimate | 1900 |
To estimate the effectiveness of offshore wind turbines, we assumed that electricity generated by newly installed offshore wind displaces an equivalent MWh of the global electricity grid mix. Then, the reduction in emissions from additional offshore wind capacity was equal to emissions (per MWh) from the 2023 global electricity grid mix as per the IEA World Energy Balances (IEA, 2024a). We then used the offshore wind capacity factor to convert to annual emissions per MW of installed capacity.
During operation, offshore wind turbines do not emit GHGs, so we assumed zero emissions per MW of installed capacity. However, emissions arise during the manufacturing of components, transportation, installation, maintenance, and decommissioning (Atilgan Turkmen & Germirli Babuna, 2024; Kaldellis & Apostolou, 2017; Mello et al., 2020; Yuan et al., 2023). Life-cycle analyses estimate that lifetime GHG emissions of offshore wind turbines are approximately 25.76 g CO₂‑eq /kWh of electricity generated (Yuan et al., 2023).
In our analysis, we focused solely on emissions produced during electricity generation, so carbon payback time and embodied life-cycle emissions were not included in our estimates of effectiveness or climate impacts.
Cost
We estimated a mean levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for offshore wind turbines of US$96/MWh based on three industry reports (IEA, 2024b; IRENA, 2024c; Nuclear Energy Agency & IEA, 2020). LCOE is a widely used metric that allows for cost comparison across generation technologies, incorporating installed capital costs, operation and maintenance, project lifespan, and energy output. Between 2010–2023, the global weighted average LCOE for offshore wind fell by 63%, from US$203/MWh to US$75/MWh, reflecting improvements in turbine size, supply chains, and regulatory support (IRENA, 2024c).
Regional costs vary significantly. Denmark had the lowest LCOE in 2023 at US$48/MWh due to favorable siting conditions and grid cost exemptions. The UK and Germany achieved the largest LCOE reductions since 2010, of 73% and 67%, respectively (IRENA, 2024c). In contrast, recent U.S. estimates exceed US$120/MWh for unsubsidized projects (McCoy et al., 2024), reflecting higher labor costs, permitting challenges, and nascent supply chains. Lazard (2023) reports a broad range of US$72–140/MWh, emphasizing how siting, project size, and technology selection influence cost outcomes.
These values mask substantial variability and project-specific risk factors. LCOEs are highly sensitive to financing terms, interest rates, permitting delays, regional grid integration requirements, and the availability of local supply chains. For context, offshore wind costs are increasingly competitive with fossil fuel–based power generation, which ranges between US$70–176/MWh (IRENA, 2024c). Offshore wind gigawatt-scale potential near load centers makes it a good potential option for decarbonizing coastal grids.
Learning Curve
Offshore wind turbines exhibit a clear learning curve, with costs declining as deployment scales and the technology matures. Learning rates for offshore wind could vary from 7.2–43%, depending on the type of costs considered, study period, technological advancements, and regional conditions. Most of the cost decline is driven by reductions in capital expenditure, particularly from larger turbines, improved manufacturing, streamlined installation, and economies of scale.
According to IRENA (2024c), the global weighted-average installed cost of offshore wind between 2010–2023 reflects a learning rate of 14.2%. Modeling by the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) estimates capital cost reductions per doubling of installed capacity at 8.8% for fixed-bottom turbines and 11.5% for floating turbines (Shields et al., 2022). European forecasts suggest that ongoing innovation and learning by doing could reduce offshore wind’s LCOE by up to 25% by 2030 relative to 2020, with learning rates of 6–12% (TNO & BLIX, 2021).
Earlier meta-analyses found offshore wind learning rates of 5–19% between 1985–2001, driven by improved turbine design and installation methods (Rubin et al., 2015). More recent assessments focused on 2010–2016 suggest capital cost learning rates of 10–12% (Beiter et al., 2021). Looking ahead, global experts project cost reductions of 37–49% by 2050 due to continued technological progress (Wiser et al., 2021).
Learning rates also vary by geography. Mature markets like Europe benefit from robust supply chains and permitting frameworks, leading to faster cost declines. On the other hand, emerging markets face higher initial costs and slower learning trajectories. We estimated a 15.8% median global learning rate for offshore wind, implying a 15.8% reduction in LCOE for each doubling of installed capacity (Table 2).
Table 2. Learning rate: drop in cost per doubling of the installed solution base.
Unit: %
25th percentile | 11.9 |
mean | 15.8 |
median (50th percentile) | 15.8 |
75th percentile | 19.6 |
Speed of Action
Speed of action refers to how quickly a climate solution physically affects the atmosphere after it is deployed. This is different from speed of deployment, which is the pace at which solutions are adopted.
At Project Drawdown, we define the speed of action for each climate solution as emergency brake, gradual, or delayed.
Deploy Offshore Wind Turbines is a GRADUAL climate solution. It has a steady, linear impact on the atmosphere. The cumulative effect over time builds as a straight line.
Adoption
Current Adoption
As of 2023, the global installed capacity for offshore wind energy reached approximately 73,000 MW (Table 3; IRENA, 2024b). Although we used 2023 as our baseline for current adoption, in 2024 an additional 10,000 MW of offshore wind capacity was installed, bringing the global total to over 83,000 MW (GWEC, 2025).
Table 3. Current adoption level, 2023.
Unit: MW installed capacity
total | 73,000 |
China currently leads in offshore wind deployment, accounting for more than 40 GW, or over half of the global installed capacity. Adoption remains negligible in many countries with several regions – particularly in Africa, Latin America, and parts of Southeast Asia – reporting minimal or no offshore wind installations to date, despite their huge potential (GWEC, 2025). For example, the United States, despite its vast technical potential, had installed only 41 MW by 2023 (IRENA, 2024b).
The global offshore wind market has gained significant momentum in recent years. A record number of new installations occurred in 2021, with continued but slower growth in 2022 and 2023. The most active markets remain concentrated in Asia and Europe, with China, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Netherlands leading in cumulative capacity. The European Union collectively reached 18.1 GW by 2023 (IRENA, 2024b), driven by favorable policy environments and advanced maritime infrastructure (IRENA, 2024a).
Adoption Trend
Global offshore wind capacity has grown rapidly, expanding from less than 1 GW in 2000 to about 73 GW by 2023 (Figure 2), reflecting technological progress, supportive policies, and accelerating investment.
Figure 2. Global offshore wind turbine installed capacity, 2000–2023. Global offshore wind capacity expanded from less than 1 GW in 2000 to about 73 GW by 2023, reflecting rapid technological progress, supportive policies, and accelerating investment in clean energy.
International Renewable Energy Agency. (2024). Renewable capacity statistics 2024. https://www.irena.org/-/media/Files/IRENA/Agency/Publication/2024/Mar/IRENA_RE_Capacity_Statistics_2024.pdf
We calculated global adoption for each year 2013–2023 and took the year-to-year difference. The adoption trend of offshore wind energy from 2013–2023 reveals a rapid and accelerating growth trajectory with significant regional disparities. Globally, installed capacity expanded from 7,200 MW in 2013 to 73,000 MW in 2023, reflecting a 10-fold increase over the decade. The most dramatic acceleration occurred in 2020–2021, when global capacity jumped from 34,000 MW to 54,000 MW. Comparing year-to-year global adoption, the mean global adoption trend was adding approximately 6,000 MW of installed capacity per year (Table 4), but expansion was unevenly distributed geographically.
Table 4. Adoption trend, 2013–2023.
Unit: MW installed capacity/yr
25th percentile | 3,000 |
mean | 6,000 |
median (50th percentile) | 5,000 |
75th percentile | 7,000 |
Regionally, Asia demonstrated the most remarkable growth. This growth was particularly pronounced in 2020–2021, when capacity soared from 9,400 MW to 28,000 MW, largely driven by China’s rapid deployment. Meanwhile, Europe also experienced steady growth, with installed capacity increasing from 8,000 MW in 2014 to 33,000 MW in 2023. In contrast, North America lags behind, with only 41 MW of installed capacity recorded as of 2023, indicating slow current adoption trends. The slow adoption of offshore wind technology in North America may be attributed to various factors, including regulatory and social barriers as well as high interest rates (McCoy et al., 2024).
Looking ahead, according to forecasts from the World Forum Offshore Wind (WFO, 2024), global offshore wind capacity is anticipated to reach 414 GW by 2032. The GWEC projects more than 350 GW of new offshore wind capacity in 2025–2034, with annual additions surpassing 30 GW by 2030 and 50 GW by 2033, bringing total capacity to about 441 GW by 2034 (GWEC, 2025).
Adoption Ceiling
The adoption ceiling for offshore wind turbines (Table 5) is determined by the technology’s global technical potential, representing the theoretical maximum deployment based on physical resource availability. Offshore wind benefits from vast oceanic areas with higher and more consistent wind speeds than onshore sites. However, its realizable potential is shaped by factors such as water depth, distance to shore, seabed conditions, regional wind patterns, and technological limitations.
Table 5. Adoption ceiling: upper limit for adoption level.
Unit: MW installed capacity
25th percentile | 58,000,000 |
mean | 62,000,000 |
median (50th percentile) | 62,000,000 |
75th percentile | 67,000,000 |
Estimates of offshore wind’s technical potential vary widely. A meta-analysis by de La Beaumelle et al. (2023) found values of 4.17–626 petawatt-hours (PWh)/year, with a median of 193 PWh/year. The World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) analysis (2019; n.d.) suggests over 71,000 GW of global offshore wind potential, with more than 70% located in deep waters suitable only for floating turbines. Roughly 25% of this resource lies within low- and middle-income countries, offering major opportunities for clean energy expansion.
Technical potential is typically calculated using wind speed maps, turbine power curves, and water depth data. For example, the ESMAP-IFC 2019 study identified 3.1 terawatts (TW) of potential across eight emerging markets using global wind and ocean depth data (ESMAP, 2019). These figures, however, do not reflect constraints such as economics, regulation, infrastructure, or marine uses that would compete with offshore wind (ESMAP, 2019). Challenges like ecological impact, permitting, and grid integration could significantly reduce practical deployment.
Despite these hurdles, offshore wind’s potential remains vast. For this analysis, we defined the adoption ceiling using installable capacity rather than generation output to avoid forecasting uncertainty. Based on the literature, we estimated an adoption ceiling of 62,000,000 MW. The scaling of floating wind turbines, especially in deep waters, will be critical to unlocking this resource, and will require continued innovation and policy support (Tumse et al., 2024).
Achievable Adoption
The IEA’s World Energy Outlook (WEO) 2024 includes several key scenarios that explore different energy futures based on varying levels of policy intervention, technological development, and market dynamics. We define the adoption achievable range for offshore wind turbines based on the Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS) and Announced Pledges Scenario (APS) (IEA, 2024b).
Achievable – Low
The low achievable adoption level is based on STEPS, which captured the current trajectory for increased adoption of offshore wind energy as well as future projections based on existing and announced policies. Under this scenario, offshore wind capacity is projected to increase more than 13-fold from 73,000 MW to 1,000,000 MW by 2050 (Table 6). This corresponds to an average compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.2%.
Table 6. Range of achievable adoption levels.
Unit: MW installed capacity
Current Adoption | 73,000 |
Achievable – Low | 1,000,000 |
Achievable – High | 1,600,000 |
Adoption Ceiling | 62,000,000 |
Achievable – High
The high achievable adoption level is based on APS, which assumes the same policy framework as STEPS, plus full realization of announced national energy and climate targets – including net-zero commitments supported by stronger clean energy investments. Under this scenario, offshore wind capacity is projected to increase by a magnitude of approximately 22, from 73,000 MW to 1,600,000 MW by 2050 (Table 6). This would require a CAGR of roughly 12.1% over the same period.
Using our adoption ceiling of 62 million MW, the current adoption of offshore wind turbines constitutes approximately 0.1% of its technical potential. The achievable adoption range, as calculated, is 1.6–2.6% of this potential.
Impacts
Climate Impact
Using baseline global adoption and effectiveness, we estimated the current total climate impact of offshore wind turbines to be approximately 0.14 Gt CO₂‑eq (0.14 Gt CO₂‑eq , 20-yr basis) of reduced emissions per year (Table 7). We estimated future climate impacts using the emissions from the 2023 baseline electricity grid. Actual emissions reductions could differ depending on how the emissions intensity of electricity generation changes over time. Assuming global policies on offshore wind power – both existing and announced – are backed with adequate implementation provisions, global adoption could reach 1 million MW by 2050. This would result in an increased emissions reduction of approximately 1.9 Gt CO₂‑eq per year. If every nation’s energy and climate targets (including net-zero commitments backed by stronger clean energy investments) are realized, offshore wind adoption could reach 1.6 million MW by 2050. This would lead to an estimated 3.0 Gt CO₂‑eq of reduced emissions per year.
Table 7. Annual climate impact at different levels of adoption.
Unit: Gt CO₂‑eq , 100-yr basis
Current Adoption | 0.14 |
Achievable – Low | 1.9 |
Achievable – High | 3.0 |
Adoption Ceiling | 120 |
We based the adoption ceiling solely on the technical potential of offshore wind resources, neglecting social and economic constraints. Thus, offshore wind turbines are unlikely to reach an average of 62 million MW of installed capacity in the next 100 years. However, reaching the adoption ceiling would correspond to annual emissions reductions of 120 Gt CO₂‑eq/yr.
Additional Benefits
Income and Work
Wind power has a strong positive impact on the economy. Wind energy projects have been shown to increase total income and employment in high-income and low- and middle-income countries, although the costs of new projects may be higher in emerging markets until the market develops (Adeyeye et al., 2020; GWEC & Global Wind Organization, 2021; World Bank Group, 2021). As the offshore wind sector expands, so will the demand for workers. A report from NREL estimated that U.S. offshore wind projects between 2024–2030 will require an annual average of 15,000–58,000 full-time workers (Stefek et al., 2022). In California, planned and proposed offshore wind farms would add about 5,750 jobs and US$15 billion in wages and further contribute to the local economy by generating tax revenue (E2, 2023). Offshore wind could also strengthen energy security by diversifying the power mix and reducing dependence on imported fuels.
Health
Reduction in air pollution directly translates into health benefits and avoided premature mortality. Simulations of offshore wind projects in China estimate that reductions in air pollution could prevent about 165,000 premature deaths each year (Ren et al., 2025). Proposed offshore wind farms on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States could prevent about 2,100 premature deaths annually and save money in health benefits from improved air quality (Buonocore et al., 2016; Shawhan et al., 2024). Because these offshore wind projects would lessen demand for natural gas and coal-powered electricity generation, populated communities downwind from power plants along the East Coast of the United States – such as New York City – would experience health benefits from improved air quality (Shawhan et al., 2024). Although the economic benefits of improved health associated with wind power have already increased rapidly from US$2 billion in 2014 to US$16 billion in 2022, these benefits could be maximized by replacing fossil fuel power plants in regions with higher health damages (Qiu et al., 2022).
Nature Protection
While there are some risks through increased ship traffic and noise and light pollution, offshore wind may provide some benefits to fish and marine life (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, n.d.; Galparsoro et al., 2022; World Economic Forum, 2025). Once constructed, offshore wind farms can serve as an artificial reef, providing new habitats in the submerged portion of the turbine (Degraer et al., 2020). When these habitats are colonized by marine organisms, this increases availability of food such as zooplankton and algae, which can increase the abundance of small fish nearby (Wilhelmsson et al., 2006).
Air Quality
Offshore wind energy reduces air pollutants released from fossil fuels, thereby reducing the emissions associated with burning coal and natural gas. A recent analysis of 32 planned or proposed offshore wind farms along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts estimated these projects could reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides by 4%, sulfur dioxide by 5%, and PM 2.5 by 6% (Shawhan et al., 2024). Modeling analyses of offshore wind in China estimate these projects could reduce about 3% of air pollution from electricity by lowering emissions from coal-powered electricity generation (Ren et al., 2025).
Other
Caveats
One limitation of our approach is the assumption that each additional MWh generated by offshore wind turbines displaces an equivalent MWh of the existing grid mix. This simplification implies that new offshore wind may, at times, displace other renewables such as onshore wind, rather than fossil-based sources. In reality, the extent of avoided emissions varies based on regional grid dynamics, marginal generation sources, and the timing and location of electricity production. This approach could be refined in the future, as emerging evidence suggests that in some cases, wind generation tends to displace a larger share of fossil-fuel output than assumed in average grid-mix methods (e.g., Millstein et al., 2024). While offshore wind avoids many of the land-use constraints associated with onshore wind, it introduces unique challenges that may limit scaling. These include high up-front capital costs, limited port infrastructure, specialized vessels, and supply-chain constraints for large components such as floating platforms and subsea cables. There is also growing competition for ocean space from fisheries, marine conservation zones, and shipping corridors (IEA, 2019).
Like all large-scale infrastructure, offshore wind systems face some risk of early retirement or component failure, which can affect their life-cycle emissions. However, because offshore wind turbines produce zero emissions during operation, any electricity they generate displaces fossil-based power and avoids associated emissions. These benefits are not reversed if a turbine is decommissioned early. Most offshore wind turbines operate for 25–30 years, with newer designs expected to exceed this lifespan (Bills, 2021; IEA, 2019). The bulk of their life-cycle emissions are front-loaded, arising from manufacturing, transportation, and installation. As a result, early retirement reduces the amount of clean electricity generated over the turbine’s lifetime, but it does not erase the emissions already avoided during its operation.
Risks
Implementing offshore wind energy involves several risks. Technically, offshore projects face harsh marine environments that can affect long-term reliability and increase maintenance costs (IRENA, 2024a). These risks can be reduced through advanced materials, corrosion‑resistant designs, predictive maintenance systems, and improved installation practices that extend turbine lifespans and reduce downtime. High capital costs and regulatory uncertainty remain among the most significant barriers, especially in emerging markets where financing, insurance, and investor confidence are limited (ESMAP, 2019). Addressing these challenges often requires stable policy frameworks, innovative financing mechanisms such as Contracts for Difference (CFDs) and blended finance, and public‑private partnerships to de‑risk investments and attract private capital.
There are also ecological risks associated with offshore wind farms, which can disrupt marine habitats, impact migratory birds and marine mammals, and cause seabed disturbances during installation (Galparsoro et al., 2022). Mitigation strategies such as adaptive siting, seasonal construction limits, and biodiversity offsets are increasingly used to minimize these impacts. Social resistance can arise from local communities due to factors such as visual impact, place attachment, perceived lack of benefits, and competing uses of marine space, such as fisheries and shipping lanes (Gonyo et al., 2021; Haggett, 2011).
Trade-offs
Offshore wind turbines do not emit GHGs during operation, but they are associated with embodied emissions from manufacturing, transport, and installation (Yuan et al., 2023). The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) life-cycle assessment estimates indicate that offshore wind energy produces about 8–35 g CO₂‑eq /kWh, compared to about 400–1,000 g CO₂ --eq/kWh for fossil-based electricity generators (Schlömer et al., 2014).
Increasing steel and concrete demand for turbine construction may cause indirect emissions in the industrial sector. These trade‑offs can be mitigated through circular economy approaches such as recycling and repurposing turbine components to cut material demand and emissions. Despite these trade-offs, the emissions saved over a turbine’s 25- to 30-year lifetime greatly exceed the upfront emissions.
Interactions with Other Solutions
Reinforcing
Increased availability of renewable energy from offshore wind turbines helps reduce emissions from the electricity grid as a whole. Reduced emissions from the electricity grid lead to lower downstream emissions for these solutions that rely on electricity use. Deploying offshore wind turbines also supports increased integration of solar photovoltaic technology by diversifying the renewable energy mix and reducing overreliance on solar variability.
Electrification of transportation systems will be more beneficial in reducing global emissions if the underlying grid includes a higher proportion of non-emitting power sources. Electric transportation systems can also reduce curtailment of wind energy through controlled-time charging and other load-shifting technologies.
Competing
Offshore wind could compete for policy attention and funding with onshore wind turbines, potentially slowing deployment in regions where onshore resources are also viable. Also, increased development and installation of offshore wind turbines could potentially compete with the deployment of those onshore, due to competition for raw materials.
Evidence Base
Consensus of effectiveness in reducing GHG emissions: High
The scientific literature on offshore wind turbines reflects high consensus regarding their potential to significantly contribute to reducing GHG emissions and supporting the transition to sustainable energy. Technological advancements, decreasing costs, and increasing efficiency have positioned offshore wind as a key player in achieving global climate targets (Jansen et al., 2020; Letcher, 2023).
Offshore wind turbines reduce GHG emissions by displacing fossil fuel-based electricity generation, thus avoiding the release of CO₂ and other climate pollutants (Akhtar et al., 2024; Nagababu et al., 2023; Shawhan et al., 2025). The strong and consistent wind speeds found over ocean surfaces make offshore turbines especially efficient, with relatively high-capacity factors and increasingly competitive costs (Akhtar et al., 2021; Bosch et al., 2018; Zhou et al., 2022).
The technical potential of offshore wind refers to the maximum electricity generation achievable using available wind resources, constrained only by physical and technological factors. Scientific reviews highlight the significant technical potential of offshore wind to meet global electricity demand many times over, particularly through expansion in deep waters using floating technologies (de La Beaumelle et al., 2023). The World Bank estimates the global technical potential for fixed and floating offshore wind at approximately 71,000 GW globally using current technology (ESMAP, n.d.). With just 83 GW installed so far (GWEC, 2025), this indicates that offshore wind’s potential remains largely untapped.
The IPCC also sees offshore wind as a key low-emissions technology for achieving net-zero pathways and can be integrated into energy systems at scale with manageable economic and technical challenges (IPCC, 2023). While there is broad scientific agreement on the potential of offshore wind turbines to significantly reduce GHG emissions, there are also growing concerns, including uncertainties around floating platform scalability, ecological impacts, supply chain readiness, and long-term operations. Most of these issues are captured in the Risks & Trade-Offs section of this document.
The results presented in this document summarize findings from 17 peer reviewed academic papers (including 6 reviews and 11 research articles), 2 books and 11 agency or institutional reports, reflecting current evidence from representative regions around the world. We recognize this limited geographic scope creates bias, and hope this work inspires research and data sharing on this topic in underrepresented regions.
Take Action
Looking to get involved? Below are some key actions for this solution that can get you started, arranged according to different roles you may play in your professional or personal life.
These actions are meant to be starting points for involvement and are not intended to be prescriptive or necessarily suggest they are the most important or impactful actions to take. We encourage you to explore and get creative!
Lawmakers and Policymakers
- Integrate perspectives from key stakeholders into the decision-making process, including fisherfolk, coastal communities, port authorities, and other groups impacted by offshore wind development.
- Simplify and standardize offshore environmental licensing and marine spatial planning to accelerate project approvals while preserving biodiversity safeguards.
- Offer subsidies, grants, low-interest loans, preferential tax policies, and other incentives for developing and operating offshore wind farms and specialized port infrastructures.
- Develop regulations, standards, and codes to ensure quality equipment production and operation – ideally, before development and adoption to prevent accidents.
- Prioritize expansion of high-voltage subsea and coastal transmission infrastructure.
- Offer equipment testing and certification systems, market information disclosures, and assistance with onsite supervision.
- Set quotas for power companies and offer expedited permitting processes for renewable energy production, including offshore wind.
- Set adjustments for wind power on-grid pricing through mechanisms such as feed-in tariffs, renewable energy auctions, or other guaranteed pricing methods for wind energy.
- Provide financing for research and development to improve the performance of wind turbines, wind forecasting, and other related technology.
- Mandate onsite wind power forecasting and set standards for data integrity.
- Create training programs for engineers, operators, and other personnel.
- Coordinate voluntary agreements with industry to increase offshore wind capacity and power generation.
- Initiate public awareness campaigns focusing on wind turbine functionality, benefits, and any public concerns.
- Implement carbon taxes and use funds to de-risk offshore investments.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Government relations and public policy job function action guide. Project Drawdown (2022)
- Legal job function action guide. Project Drawdown (2022)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Practitioners
- Work with external organizations to enter new markets and identify challenges early in development.
- Plan integrated offshore logistics to anticipate specialized vessel needs and port upgrades.
- Engage in marine spatial planning and cross-sector stakeholder dialogues to remove conflicts.
- Investigate community-led or cooperative offshore business models to improve local acceptance.
- Partner with academic institutions, technical institutions, vocational programs, and other external organizations to provide workforce development programs.
- Focus research and development efforts on increasing the productivity and efficiency of turbines, improving offshore design, and supporting technology such as wind forecasting.
- Utilize and integrate materials and designs that enhance recyclability and foster circular supply chains.
- Participate in voluntary agreements with government bodies to increase policy support for onshore wind capacity and power generation.
- Support and participate in public awareness campaigns focusing on wind turbine functionality, benefits, and any public concerns.
- Stay abreast of changing policies, regulations, zoning laws, tax incentives, and other related developments.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Business Leaders
- Enter into Purchase Power Agreements (PPAs).
- Purchase high-integrity Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs).
- Invest in companies that provide offshore wind energy, transmission assets, shared port facilities, component manufacturers, or related technology, such as forecasting.
- Initiate or join voluntary agreements with national or international bodies and support industry collaboration.
- Develop workforce partnerships, offer employee scholarships, or sponsor training for careers in offshore wind or related professions such as marine engineering.
- Support long-term, stable contracts (e.g., power purchase agreements or CFDs) that de-risk investment in floating offshore wind foundation technologies, encouraging their development and deployment.
- Support community engagement initiatives in areas where you do business to educate and highlight the local economic benefits of offshore wind.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Climate solutions at work. Project Drawdown (2021)
- Drawdown-aligned business framework. Project Drawdown (2021)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Nonprofit Leaders
- Advocate for favorable policies and incentives for offshore wind energy development, such as financing, preferential tax policies, guaranteed pricing methods, quotas, community engagement, and comanagement models.
- Advocate for fair and transparent benefit-sharing with coastal communities affected by offshore wind.
- Help conduct proactive land use planning to avoid infrastructure or development projects that might interfere with protected areas, biodiversity, cultural heritage, or traditional marine uses.
- Propose or help develop regulations, standards, and codes to ensure quality equipment production and operation.
- Conduct open-access research to improve the performance of wind turbines, wind forecasting, and other related technology.
- Operate or assist with equipment testing and certification systems, market information disclosures, and onsite supervision.
- Create or assist with training programs for engineers, operators, and other personnel.
- Coordinate voluntary agreements between governments and industry to increase offshore wind capacity and power generation.
- Initiate public awareness campaigns focusing on wind turbine functionality, benefits, and any public concerns.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Investors
- Invest in the development of offshore wind farms.
- Invest in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) funds that hold offshore wind companies in their portfolios.
- Consider offering flexible and low-interest loans for developing and operating offshore wind farms.
- Invest in supporting infrastructure such as utility companies, grid development, and access roads.
- Invest in component technology and related science, such as wind forecasting.
- Help develop insurance products tailored to marine risks and early-stage offshore projects.
- Invest in green bonds for companies developing offshore wind energy or supporting infrastructure.
- Align investments with existing public-private partnerships, voluntary agreements, or voluntary guidance that might apply in the location of the investment (including those that apply to biodiversity).
Further information:
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Philanthropists and International Aid Agencies
- Provide catalytic financing for or help develop offshore wind farms.
- Award grants to improve supporting infrastructure such as utility companies, grid development, and access roads.
- Support the development of component technology and related science, such as wind forecasting.
- Fund updates to high-resolution marine wind atlases and oceanographic data systems.
- Foster cooperation between low- and middle-income countries for floating wind and deepwater innovation in emerging economies.
- Advocate for favorable policies and incentives for offshore wind energy development, such as financing, preferential tax policies, guaranteed pricing methods, and quotas.
- Propose, build capacity for, or help develop regulations, standards, and codes for marine permitting, offshore market design, equipment production, and operation.
- Initiate public awareness campaigns focusing on wind turbine functionality, benefits, and any public concerns.
- Facilitate partnerships to share wind turbine technology and best practices between established and emerging markets, promoting energy equity and access.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Thought Leaders
- Advocate for favorable policies and incentives for offshore wind energy development, such as financing, preferential tax policies, guaranteed pricing methods, and quotas.
- Propose or help develop regulations, standards, and codes to ensure quality equipment production and operation.
- Conduct research to improve the performance of wind turbines, wind forecasting, and other related technology.
- Initiate public awareness campaigns focusing on how wind turbines function, benefits, and why they are necessary, addressing any public concerns.
- Advocate for community engagement, respect for Indigenous rights, and preservation of cultural heritage and traditional ways of life to be included in wind power expansion efforts.
Further information:
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Technologists and Researchers
- Improve the productivity and efficiency of wind turbines.
- Improve battery capacity for electricity storage.
- Develop more accurate, timely, and cost-effective means of offshore wind forecasting.
- Engineer new or improved means of manufacturing towers and components – ideally with locally sourced materials.
- Enhance design features such as wake steering, bladeless wind power, and quiet wind turbines.
- Optimize power output, efficiency, and deployment for vertical-axis turbines.
- Refine methods for retaining power for low-speed winds.
- Research and develop optimal ways offshore wind can provide habitats for marine species and reduce negative impacts on biodiversity; research total impact of offshore wind on local ecosystems.
- Develop strategies to minimize the impact of the noise of offshore wind turbines, both under and above water.
- Develop more accurate forecasting models for the performance of fixed-base and floating offshore wind turbines.
- Improve the aero-servo-elasticity of floating offshore wind turbines to accommodate more advanced components.
- Improve existing – or develop new – materials and designs that can withstand marine environments.
- Help develop designs and operational protocols to facilitate installation, minimize maintenance, improve safety, and reduce overall costs.
- Develop materials and designs that facilitate recycling and circulate supply chains.
- Innovate grid connections and transmission infrastructure for offshore and deep-sea wind farms.
- Improve smart grid connections to manage integrating offshore wind farms.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
Communities, Households, and Individuals
- Purchase high-integrity RECs, which track ownership of renewable energy generation.
- If your utility company offers transparent green pricing, which charges a premium to cover the extra cost of renewable energy, opt into it if possible.
- Conduct research on the benefits and development of wind energy and share the information with your friends, family, and networks.
- Stay informed about wind development projects that impact your community and support them when possible.
- Support the development of community wind co-ops or shared ownership structures that allow local communities to directly benefit from offshore wind projects.
- Participate in public consultations, licensing hearings, and awareness campaigns focused on offshore wind projects.
- Advocate for favorable policies and incentives for offshore wind energy development, such as financing, preferential tax policies, guaranteed pricing methods, and quotas.
Further information:
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Socio-economic impact study of offshore wind. Sylvest (2020)
“Take Action” Sources
- Winds of progress: an in-depth exploration of offshore, floating, and onshore wind turbines as cornerstones for sustainable energy generation and environmental stewardship. Afridi et al. (2024)
- Assessment of factors affecting onshore wind power deployment in India. Das et al. (2020)
- Barriers to onshore wind farm implementation in Brazil. Farkat Diógenes et al. (2019)
- Barriers to onshore wind energy implementation: a systematic review. Farkat Diógenes et al. (2020)
- Overcoming barriers to onshore wind farm implementation in Brazil. Farkat Diógenes et al. (2020)
- Analysis of the promotion of onshore wind energy in the EU: Feed-in tariff or renewable portfolio standard? García-Álvarez et al. (2017)
- Global wind report. GWEC. (2024)
- Renewable energy policies: a comparative analysis of Nigeria and the USA. Idoko et al. (2024)
- Renewables 2022 – analysis and forecast to 2027. IEA (2022)
- Energy systems. IPCC (2022)
- Floating offshore wind outlook. IRENA (2024)
- Enabling frameworks for offshore wind scale up. IRENA (2023)
- Highlighting the need to embed circular economy in low carbon infrastructure decommissioning: the case of offshore wind. Jensen et al. (2020)
- Smart grids and renewable energy systems: Perspectives and grid integration challenges. Khalid (2024)
- Analysis and recommendations for onshore wind power policies in China. Li et al. (2018)
- Renewable energy resources, policies and gaps in BRICS countries and the global impact. Pathak et al. (2019)
- The need for comprehensive and well targeted instrument mixes to stimulate energy transitions: The case of energy efficiency policy. Rosenow et al. (2017)
- Grand challenges in the design, manufacture, and operation of future wind turbine systems. Veers et al. (2023)
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Credits
Lead Fellow
Michael Dioha, Ph.D.
Contributors
Ruthie Burrows, Ph.D.
Daniel Jasper
Internal Reviewers
James Gerber, Ph.D.
Megan Matthews, Ph.D.
Amanda Smith, Ph.D.
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Greenhouse gas quantity expressed relative to CO₂ with the same warming impact over 100 years, calculated by multiplying emissions by the 100-yr GWP for the emitted gases.
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Greenhouse gas quantity expressed relative to CO₂ with the same warming impact over 20 years, calculated by multiplying emissions by the 20-yr GWP for the emitted gases.
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8th World Congress on Conservation Agriculture
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Reducing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere by preventing or reducing emissions.
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The process of increasing acidity.
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The extent to which emissions reduction or carbon removal is above and beyond what would have occurred without implementing a particular action or solution.
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An upper limit on solution adoption based on physical or technical constraints, not including economic or policy barriers. This level is unlikely to be reached and will not be exceeded.
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The quantity and metric to measure implementation for a particular solution that is used as the reference unit for calculations within that solution.
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A composting method in which organic waste is processed in freestanding piles that can be aerated actively with forced air or passively by internal convection.
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The interactions of aerodynamic forces and flexible structures, often including the stucture's control system.
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A process in which microbes break down organic materials in the presence of oxygen. This process converts food and green waste into nutrient-rich compost.
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Farming practices that work to create socially and ecologically sustainable food production.
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Addition of trees and shrubs to crop or animal farming systems.
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Spread out the cost of an asset over its useful lifetime.
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A crop that live one year or less from planting to harvest; also called annual.
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aerated static piles
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black carbon
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Made from material of biological origin, such as plants, animals, or other organisms.
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A renewable energy source generated from organic matter from plants and/or algae.
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An energy source composed primarily of methane and CO₂ that is produced by microorganisms when organic matter decomposes in the absence of oxygen.
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Carbon stored in biological matter, including soil, plants, fungi, and plant products (e.g., wood, paper, biofuels). This carbon is sequestered from the atmosphere but can be released through decomposition or burning.
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Living or dead renewable matter from plants or animals, not including organic material transformed into fossil fuels. Peat, in early decay stages, is partially renewable biomass.
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Biogas refined to the same quality as natural gas. CO₂ and impurities are removed, and the biomethane can be distributed and used in existing natural gas technologies.
-
A type of carbon sequestration that captures carbon from CO₂ via photosynthesis and stores it in soils, sediments, and biomass, distinct from sequestration through chemical or industrial pathways.
-
A climate pollutant, also called soot, produced from incomplete combustion of organic matter, either naturally (wildfires) or from human activities (biomass or fossil fuel burning).
-
A secure, decentralized way of digitally tracking transactions that could be used to improve the transparency and efficiency of carbon markets.
-
High-latitude (>50°N or >50°S) climate regions characterized by short growing seasons and cold temperatures.
-
The components of a building that physically separate the indoors from the outdoor environment.
-
Businesses involved in the sale and/or distribution of solution-related equipment and technology, and businesses that want to support adoption of the solution.
-
A chemical reaction involving heating a solid to a high temperature; to make cement clinker, limestone is calcined into lime in a process that requires high heat and produces CO₂.
-
The ratio of the actual electricity an energy technology generates over a period of time to the maximum it could have produced if it operated at full capacity continuously.
-
A four-wheeled passenger vehicle.
-
Average number of people traveling in a car per trip.
-
Technologies that collect CO₂ before it enters the atmosphere, preventing emissions at their source. Collected CO₂ can be used onsite or in new products, or stored long term to prevent release.
-
A greenhouse gas that is naturally found in the atmosphere. Its atmospheric concentration has been increasing due to human activities, leading to warming and climate impacts.
-
Total GHG emissions resulting from a particular action, material, technology, or sector.
-
Amount of GHG emissions released per activity or unit of production.
-
A marketplace where carbon credits are purchased and sold. One carbon credit represents activities that avoid, reduce, or remove one metric ton of GHG emissions.
-
A colorless, odorless gas released during the incomplete combustion of fuels containing carbon. Carbon monoxide can harm health and be fatal at high concentrations.
-
The time it takes for the emissions reduction from a measure to equal the emissions invested in implementing the measure.
-
Activities or technologies that pull CO₂ out of the atmosphere, including enhancing natural carbon sinks and deploying engineered sinks.
-
Long-term storage of carbon in soils, sediment, biomass, oceans, and geologic formations after removal of CO₂ from the atmosphere or CO₂ capture from industrial and power generation processes.
-
carbon capture and storage
-
carbon capture, utilization, and storage
-
A binding ingredient in concrete responsible for most of concrete’s life-cycle emissions. Cement is made primarily of clinker mixed with other mineral components.
-
chlorofluorocarbon
-
methane
-
Energy sources that have little to no negative environmental or climate impacts during operation relative to fossil fuel–based energy sources.
-
Gases or particles that have a planet-warming effect when released to the atmosphere. Some climate pollutants also cause other forms of environmental damage.
-
A binding ingredient in cement responsible for most of the life-cycle emissions from cement and concrete production.
-
A waste management process where waste is made into the same original product, preserving quality and value so materials can be reused multiple times while keeping resources in continuous use.
-
carbon monoxide
-
Neighbors, volunteer organizations, hobbyists and interest groups, online communities, early adopters, individuals sharing a home, and private citizens seeking to support the solution.
-
A solution that potentially lowers the benefit of another solution through reduced effectiveness, higher costs, reduced or delayed adoption, or diminished global climate impact.
-
A farming system that combines reduced tillage, cover crops, and crop rotations.
-
A risk-sharing financial agreement in which two parties (e.g., renewable generator, government) guarantee a fixed price (e.g., electricity price). If market prices fluctuate, one party pays the other the difference.
-
carbon dioxide
-
A measure standardizing the warming effects of greenhouse gases relative to CO₂. CO₂-eq is calculated as quantity (metric tons) of a particular gas multiplied by its GWP.
-
carbon dioxide equivalent
-
Plant materials left over after a harvest, such as stalks, leaves, and seed husks.
-
A granular material made by crushing broken or waste glass.
-
direct air capture
-
Financial agreements in which government creditors forgive a portion of debt in exchange for specific conservation commitments.
-
The process of cutting greenhouse gas emissions (primarily CO₂) from a particular sector or activity.
-
An industrial process that removes printing ink from used or waste paper fibers, creating clean pulp that can be turned into new paper products.
-
A solution that works slower than gradual solutions and is expected to take longer to reach its full potential.
-
Microbial conversion of nitrate into inert nitrogen gas under low-oxygen conditions, which produces the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide as an intermediate compound.
-
Greenhouse gas emissions produced as a direct result of the use of a technology or practice.
-
A window consisting of two glass panes separated by a sealed gap and typically filled with air or an inert gas to improve the heat flow resistance.
-
A waste management system that transforms waste into different products of lower quality and value, making materials harder to recycle again and limiting reuse.
-
Ability of a solution to reduce emissions or remove carbon, expressed in CO₂-eq per installed adoption unit. Effectiveness is quantified per year when the adoption unit is cumulative over time.
-
A process that uses electric current to drive a reaction, such as using electricity to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.
-
Greenhouse gas emissions accrued over the lifetime of a material or product, including as it is produced, transported, used, and disposed of.
-
Solutions that work faster than gradual solutions, front-loading their impact in the near term.
-
Methane produced by microbes in the digestive tracts of ruminant livestock, such as cattle, sheep and goats.
-
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
-
expanded polystyrene
-
environmental, social, and governance
-
exchange-traded fund
-
A process triggered by an overabundance of nutrients in water, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, that stimulates excessive plant and algae growth and can harm aquatic organisms.
-
Electric vehicle
-
An ecological process that releases water into the atmosphere as a gas from soil and ice (evaporation) and plants (transpiration).
-
The scientific literature that supports our assessment of a solution's effectiveness.
-
A group of human-made molecules that contain fluorine atoms. They are potent greenhouse gases with GWPs that can be hundreds to thousands times higher than CO₂.
-
Food, agriculture, land, and ocean
-
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
-
feed conversion ratio
-
The efficiency with which an animal converts feed into increased body mass, measured as the ratio of the weight of the feed given to weight gain. Lower FCR means less feed for the same growth.
-
Raw material inputs for manufacturing, processing, and managing waste.
-
Containing or consisting of iron.
-
A measure of fishing activity over time and area, commonly measured by number of trips, vessel time, or gear deployed.
-
food loss and waste
-
Food discarded during pre-consumer supply chain stages, including production, harvest, and processing.
-
Food discarded during pre-consumer supply chain stages, including production, harvest, and processing, along with food discarded wt the retail and consumer stages of the supply chain.
-
Food discarded at the retail and consumer stages of the supply chain.
-
Combustible materials found in Earth's crust that can be burned for energy, including oil, natural gas, and coal. They are formed from decayed organisms through prehistoric geological processes.
-
Unintentional leaks of gases or vapor into the atmosphere.
-
Unintentional leaks of gases or vapor into the atmosphere.
-
A group of countries representing the majority of the world's population, trade, and GDP. There are 19 member countries plus the European Union and the African Union
-
greenhouse gas
-
gigajoule or billion joules
-
The glass layers or panes in a window.
-
A measure of how effectively a gas traps heat in the atmosphere relative to CO₂. GWP converts greenhouse gases into CO₂-eq emissions based on their 20- or 100-year impacts.
-
A solution that has a steady impact on the atmosphere. Effectiveness is expected to be constant over time rather than having a higher impact in the near or long term.
-
A fixed income debt instrument focused on sustainable projects. Green bonds work in the same manner as traditional bonds and may be issued by corporations, financial institutions, and governments.
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Biomass discarded during landscaping and gardening.
-
A gas that traps heat in the atmosphere, contributing to climate change.
-
The makeup of electricity generation on a power grid, showing the share contributed by various energy sources (e.g., coal, natural gas, nuclear, wind, solar, hydro) relative to total electricity production.
-
metric gigatons or billion metric tons
-
global warming potential
-
hectare
-
household air pollution
-
hydrochlorofluorocarbon
-
Number of years a person is expected to live without disability or other limitations that restrict basic functioning and activity.
-
A unit of land area comprising 10,000 square meters, roughly equal to 2.5 acres.
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Hybrid electric car
-
hydrofluorocarbon
-
hydrofluoroolefin
-
hydrofluoroolefin
-
Particles and gases released from use of polluting fuels and technologies such as biomass cookstoves that cause poor air quality in and around the home.
-
heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration
-
Organic compounds that contain hydrogen and carbon.
-
Human-made F-gases that contain hydrogen, fluorine, and carbon. They typically have short atmospheric lifetimes and GWPs hundreds or thousands times higher than CO₂.
-
Human-made F-gases that contain hydrogen, fluorine, and carbon, with at least one double bond. They have low GWPs and can be climate-friendly alternatives to HFC refrigerants.
-
Hydrogen is a gas that can be a fuel, feedstock, or means of storing energy. It generates water instead of GHG when burned, but the process of producing it can emit high levels of GHGs.
-
Hydrogen is a gas that can be a fuel, feedstock, or means of storing energy. It generates water instead of GHG when burned, but the process of producing it can emit high levels of GHGs.
-
A recycling process that separates fibers from contaminants for reuse. Paper or cardboard is mixed with water to break down fibrous materials into pulp.
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internal combustion engine
-
Aerobic decomposition of organic waste in a sealed container or bin/bay system.
-
Greenhouse gas emissions produced as a result of a technology or practice but not directly from its use.
-
Device used to power vehicles by the intake, compression, combustion, and exhaust of fuel that drives moving parts.
-
The annual discount rate that balances net cash flows for a project over time. Also called IRR, internal rate of return is used to estimate profitability of potential investments.
-
Individuals or institutions willing to lend money in search of a return on their investment.
-
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
-
Indigenous peoples’ land
-
Integrated pest management.
-
internal rate of return
-
International Union for Conservation of Nature
-
The most comprehensive global list of species threatened with extinction, maintained by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
-
International agreement adopted in 2016 to phase down the use of high-GWP HFC F-gases over the time frame 2019–2047.
-
A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by 1,000 watts of power over one hour.
-
kiloton or one thousand metric tons
-
kilowatt-hour
-
A land-holding system, e.g. ownership, leasing, or renting. Secure land tenure means farmers or other land users will maintain access to and use of the land in future years.
-
Gases, mainly methane and CO₂, created by the decomposition of organic matter in the absence of oxygen.
-
levelized cost of electricity
-
leak detection and repair
-
Regular monitoring for fugitive methane leaks throughout oil and gas, coal, and landfill sector infrastructure and the modification or replacement of leaking equipment.
-
Relocation of emissions-causing activities outside of a mitigation project area rather than a true reduction in emissions.
-
The rate at which solution costs decrease as adoption increases, based on production efficiencies, technological improvements, or other factors.
-
Percent decrease in costs per doubling of adoption.
-
A metric describing the expected break-even cost of generating electricity per megawatt-hour ($/MWh), combining costs related to capital, operation, and fuel (if used) and dividing by total output over the generator's lifetime.
-
landfill gas
-
Greenhouse gas emissions from the sourcing, production, use, and disposal of a technology or practice.
-
The total weight of an organism before any meat processing.
-
low- and middle-income countries
-
liquefied petroleum gas
-
land use change
-
A measure of the amount of light produced by a light source per energy input.
-
live weight
-
marginal abatement cost curve
-
Livestock grazing practices that strategically manage livestock density, grazing intensity, and timing. Also called improved grazing, these practices have environmental, soil health, and climate benefits, including enhanced soil carbon sequestration.
-
A tool to measure and compare the financial cost and abatement benefit of individual actions based on the initial and operating costs, revenue, and emission reduction potential.
-
Defined by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as: "A clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values." References to PAs here also include other effective area-based conservation measures defined by the IUCN.
-
A facility that receives recyclable waste from residential, commercial, and industrial sources; separates, processes, and prepares them; and then sells them to manufacturers for reuse in new products.
-
A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by one million watts of power over one hour.
-
A greenhouse gas with a short lifetime and high GWP that can be produced through a variety of mechanisms including the breakdown of organic matter.
-
A measure of mass equivalent to 1,000 kilograms (~2,200 lbs).
-
million hectares
-
Soils mostly composed of inorganic materials formed through the breakdown of rocks. Most soils are mineral soils, and they generally have less than 20% organic matter by weight.
-
A localized electricity system that independently generates and distributes power. Typically serving limited geographic areas, mini-grids can operate in isolation or interconnected with the main grid.
-
Reducing the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere by cutting emissions or removing CO₂.
-
megajoule or one million joules
-
Percent of trips made by different passenger and freight transportation modes.
-
Marine Protected Area
-
materials recovery facility
-
Municipal solid waste
-
megaton or million metric tons
-
Materials discarded from residential and commercial sectors, including organic waste, glass, metals, plastics, paper, and cardboard.
-
Megawatt-hour
-
micro wind turbine
-
square meter kelvins per watt (a measure of thermal resistance, also called R-value)
-
The enclosed housing at the top of a wind turbine tower that contains the main mechanical and electrical components of the turbine.
-
A commitment from a country to reduce national emissions and/or sequester carbon in alignment with global climate goals under the Paris Agreement, including plans for adapting to climate impacts.
-
A gaseous form of hydrocarbons consisting mainly of methane.
-
Chemicals found in nature that are used for cooling and heating, such as CO₂, ammonia, and some hydrocarbons. They have low GWPs and are ozone friendly, making them climate-friendly refrigerants.
-
Microbial conversion of ammonia or ammonium to nitrite and then to nitrate under aerobic conditions.
-
A group of air pollutant molecules composed of nitrogen and oxygen, including NO and NO₂.
-
A greenhouse gas produced during fossil fuel combustion and agricultural and industrial processes. N₂O is hundreds of times more potent than CO₂ at trapping atmospheric heat, and it depletes stratospheric ozone.
-
Metals or alloys that do not contain significant amounts of iron.
-
Social welfare organizations, civic leagues, social clubs, labor organizations, business associations, and other not-for-profit organizations.
-
A material or energy source that relies on resources that are finite or not naturally replenished at the rate of consumption, including fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas.
-
nitrogen oxides
-
nitrous oxide
-
The process of increasing the acidity of seawater, primarily caused by absorption of CO₂ from the atmosphere.
-
An agreement between a seller who will produce future goods and a purchaser who commits to buying them, often used as project financing for producers prior to manufacturing.
-
Waste made of plant or animal matter, including food waste and green waste.
-
organic waste
-
Protected Area
-
Productive use of wet or rewetted peatlands that does not disturb the peat layer, such as for hunting, gathering, and growing wetland-adapted crops for food, fiber, and energy.
-
A legally protected area that lacks effective enforcement or management, resulting in minimal to no conservation benefit.
-
Airborne particles composed of solids and liquids.
-
A measure of transporting one passenger over a distance of one kilometer.
-
Incentive payments to landowners or managers to conserve natural resources and promote healthy ecological functions or ecosystem services.
-
Small, hardened pieces of plastic made from cooled resin that can be melted to make new plastic products.
-
The longevity of any greenhouse gas emission reductions or removals. Solution impacts are considered permanent if the risk of reversing the positive climate impacts is low within 100 years.
-
Payments for ecosystem services
-
A mixture of hydrocarbons, small amounts of other organic compounds, and trace amounts of metals used to produce products such as fuels or plastics.
-
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a class of synthetic chemicals that do not degrade easily in the environment. They can pollute the environment and can have negative impacts on human health.
-
Reduce the use of a material or practice over time.
-
Eliminate the use of a material or practice over time.
-
Plug-in hybrid electric car
-
Private, national, or multilateral organizations dedicated to providing aid through in-kind or financial donations.
-
An atmospheric reaction among sunlight, VOCs, and nitrogen oxide that leads to ground-level ozone formation. Ground-level ozone, a component of smog, harms human health and the environment.
-
The process by which sunlight is converted into electricity. When light hits certain materials, such as those in solar panels, it mobilizes electrons, creating an electric current.
-
polyisocyanurate
-
The adjustment of turbine blade angles around their long axis in which a control system rotates blades slightly forward or backward to regulate wind capture and optimize electricity generation.
-
passenger kilometer
-
particulate matter
-
Particulate matter 2.5 micrometers or less in diameter that can harm human health when inhaled.
-
Elected officials and their staff, bureaucrats, civil servants, regulators, attorneys, and government affairs professionals.
-
System in a vehicle that generates power and delivers it to the wheels. It typically includes an engine and/or motor, transmission, driveshaft, and differential.
-
Purchase Power Agreement.
-
People who most directly interface with a solution and/or determine whether the solution is used and/or available.
-
A substance that is the starting material for a chemical reaction that forms a different substance.
-
Extraction of naturally occurring resources from the Earth, including mining, logging, and oil and gas refining. These resources can be used in raw or minimally processed forms to produce materials.
-
The process of converting inorganic matter, including carbon dioxide, into organic matter (biomass), primarily by photosynthetic organisms such as plants and algae.
-
Defined by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature as "A clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values". References to PAs here also include other effective area-based conservation measures defined by the IUCN.
-
A process that separates and breaks down wood and other raw materials into fibers that form pulp, the base ingredient for making paper products.
-
polyurethane
-
Long-term contract between a company (the buyer) and a renewable energy producer (the seller).
-
photovoltaic
-
research and development
-
A situation in which improvements in efficiency or savings lead to consumers increasing consumption, partially or fully offsetting or exceeding the emissions or cost benefits.
-
renewable energy certificate
-
Chemical or mixture used for cooling and heating in refrigeration, air conditioning, and heat pump equipment. Refrigerants absorb and release heat as they move between states under changing pressure.
-
The amount of refrigerant needed for a particular refrigeration, air conditioning, or heat pump system.
-
A group of approaches to farming and ranching that emphasizes enhancing the health of soil by restoring its carbon content and providing other benefits to the farm and surrounding ecosystem.
-
A solution that can increase the beneficial impact of another solution through increased effectiveness, lower costs, improved adoption, enhanced global climate impact, and/or other benefits to people and nature.
-
A material or energy source that relies on naturally occuring and replenishing resources such as plant matter, wind, or sunlight.
-
A market-based instrument that tracks ownership of renewable energy generation.
-
The moldable form of raw plastic material, created by melting down waste or virgin plastics and serving as the building block for creating new plastic goods.
-
A class of animals with complex stomachs that can digest grass. Most grazing livestock are ruminants including cows, sheep, and goats along with several other species.
-
sustainable aviation fuel
-
A wetland ecosystem regularly flooded by tides and containing salt-tolerant plants, such as grasses and herbs.
-
Very large or small numbers are formatted in scientific notation. A positive exponent multiplies the number by powers of ten; a negative exponent divides the number by powers of ten.
-
Seasonal coefficient of performance
-
Sustainable Development Goals
-
Average units of heat energy released for every unit of electrical energy consumed, used to measure heat pump efficiency.
-
A practice in which multiple utility companies own and operate high-voltage power lines, sharing both costs and benefits.
-
A window consisting of one glass pane without any additional insulating layers.
-
Small-scale family farmers and other food producers, often with limited resources, usually in the tropics. The average size of a smallholder farm is two hectares (about five acres).
-
soil organic carbon
-
Carbon stored in soils, including both organic (from decomposing plants and microbes) and inorganic (from carbonate-containing minerals).
-
Carbon stored in soils in organic forms (from decomposing plants and microbes). Soil organic carbon makes up roughly half of soil organic matter by weight.
-
Biologically derived matter in soils, including living, dead, and decayed plant and microbial tissues. Soil organic matter is roughly half carbon on a dry-weight basis.
-
soil organic matter
-
A substance that takes up another liquid or gas substance, either by absorbtion or adsorption.
-
sulfur oxides
-
sulfur dioxide
-
The rate at which a climate solution physically affects the atmosphere after being deployed. At Project Drawdown, we use three categories: emergency brake (fastest impact), gradual, or delayed (slowest impact).
-
Climate regions between latitudes 23.4° to 35° above and below the equator characterized by warm summers and mild winters.
-
A polluting gas produced primarily from burning fossil fuels and industrial processes that directly harms the environment and human health.
-
A group of gases containing sulfur and oxygen that predominantly come from burning fossil fuels. They contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and respiratory health issues.
-
Processes, people, and resources involved in producing and delivering a product from supplier to end customer, including material acquisition.
-
Sport utility vehicle
-
metric ton
-
metric tons
-
Technology developers, including founders, designers, inventors, R&D staff, and creators seeking to overcome technical or practical challenges.
-
Climate regions between 35° to 50° above and below the equator characterized by moderate mean annual temperatures and distinct seasons, with warm summers and cold winters.
-
A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by one trillion watts of power over one hour.
-
trifluoroacetic acid
-
trifluoroacetic acid
-
A measure of how well a material prevents heat flow, often called R-value or RSI-value for insulation. A higher R-value means better thermal performance.
-
Individuals with an established audience for their work, including public figures, experts, journalists, and educators.
-
Charges for disposal of materials paid to facility operators. Fees can be charged per ton of waste disposed or based on economic indicators such as the Consumer Price Index.
-
A window consisting of three panes of glass separated by two insulating inert gas-filled layers, providing more heat flow resistance than single or double glazing.
-
Low-latitude (23.4°S to 23.4°N) climate regions near the Equator characterized by year-round high temperatures and distinct wet and dry seasons.
-
Terawatt, equal to 1,000 gigawatts
-
terawatt-hour
-
United Nations
-
United Nations Environment Programme
-
Self-propelled machine for transporting passengers or freight on roads.
-
A measure of one vehicle traveling a distance of one kilometer.
-
Aerobic decomposition of organic waste by earthworms and microorganisms.
-
vehicle kilometer
-
volatile organic compound
-
Gases made of organic, carbon-based molecules that are readily released into the air from other solid or liquid materials. Some VOCs are greenhouse gases or can harm human health.
-
watt (a measure of power or energy transfer.)
-
Landscape waste, storm debris, wood processing residues, and recovered post-consumer wood.
-
A measure of power equal to one joule per second.
-
Aerobic decomposition of organic waste in long, narrow rows called windrows. Windrows are generally twice as long as they are wide.
-
A subset of forest ecosystems that may have sparser canopy cover, smaller-stature trees, and/or trees characterized by basal branching rather than a single main stem.
-
extruded polystyrene
-
The rotation of the nacelle (the enclosed housing at the top of a wind turbine tower that contains the main mechanical and electrical components of the turbine) so that the rotor blades are always facing directly into the wind.
-
year