January 18, 2025
Report

West Coast Offshore Wind Transmission Study

Abstract

As a primary federal investigation of the utility of transmission to support offshore wind emergence in the Western Interconnect, the West Coast Offshore Wind Transmission study evaluates five distinct West Coast-wide transmission scenarios and trades the economic benefits and costs of six development pathways from 2035 to 2050. In this time, 33 GW of OSW generation and supporting transmission are explored within the context of 350 additional GW of generation to support 100% clean electricity. Geospatial analysis informed plausible transmission topologies and cost estimates. All pathways to intraregional or interregional coordination transmission builds showed more than $14 billion in present value cost savings, with a maximum of $25 billion of savings in the interregional case. These savings are primarily driven by fuel costs and increased availability of power flows enabled by new transmission networks. Key considerations of clean, dispatchable generation options, geographic disaggregation of costs, system reliability reinforcements, resilience, and community values are also presented and discussed.

Published: January 18, 2025

Citation

Douville T.C., K.K. Arkema, E.C. Boos, M.A. Daly, K. Oikonomou, C. Qin, and A. Rahman, et al. 2025. West Coast Offshore Wind Transmission Study Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. doi:10.2172/2500279.

Research topics