Government study finds offshore wind could meet US electricity needs

James S Murray
clock • 2 min read

"Offshore wind resources have substantial potential to supply a large portion of the Nation's electricity demand"

Wind farms off the coast of the US could generate enough power to meet the country's entire electricity demands, according to a new study from the Department of the Interior released last week. Speaking...

To continue reading this article...

Join BusinessGreen

In just a few clicks you can start your free BusinessGreen Lite membership for 12 months, providing you access to:

  • Three complimentary articles per month covering the latest real-time news, analysis, and opinion from Europe’s leading source of information on the Green economy and business
  • Receive important and breaking news stories via our daily news alert
  • Our weekly newsletter with the best of the week’s green business news and analysis

Join now

 

Already a BusinessGreen member?

Login

More on Technology

CDP and Google fellowship aims to harness AI to bolster climate adaptation efforts

CDP and Google fellowship aims to harness AI to bolster climate adaptation efforts

Environmental disclosure non-profit and tech giant’s charitable arm to create new tool to help transform how cities, states, and regions apply CDP's dataset

Stuart Stone
clock 10 March 2026 • 3 min read
Study: AI could be used to turn data centres into 'power flexible' assets to ease grid constraints

Study: AI could be used to turn data centres into 'power flexible' assets to ease grid constraints

UK's first trial of AI grid technology shows data centres can adjust power needs in real time, rather than be 'always on' assets

clock 04 March 2026 • 3 min read
Fairphone calls on tech industry to recognise biodiversity as core business risk

Fairphone calls on tech industry to recognise biodiversity as core business risk

New study warns tech companies’ climate-focused strategies are overlooking biodiversity damage in the industry's supply chain

clock 04 March 2026 • 3 min read