Norway oil giant backs gigawatt-scale offshore wind farm and green hydrogen in Tasmania

Published by

Norwegian oil giant Equinor has thrown its weight behind the offshore wind plans of Australian renewables company Nexsphere to build a 1GW project off the coast of north-east Tasmania.

Nexsphere said on Thursday the two companies were working up a deal, expected to be completed in the first part of 2023, to collaborate on the proposed Bass Offshore Wind Energy project (BOWE).

The project was first proposed roughly a year ago by Nexsphere, formerly Brookvale Energy, for up to 70 wind turbines off the coast of Tasmania, with a link to connect at George Town, close to the proposed Marinus Link undersea cable to the mainland.

The project also has its eyes on the big green hydrogen and green ammonia facilities planned by the likes of Fortescue, Woodside, and Origin for Bell Bay, as well as the potential to export electricity through the Marinus Link to Victoria in the future.

Nexsphere says Equinor will bring to the project its experience and expertise in the development and construction of offshore wind farms – starting with preparatory activities, already underway – while Nexsphere will focus on progressing the project.

Nexsphere CEO Glen Kierse says the potential for offshore wind in Tasmania is “extraordinary,” and the company sees BOWE as one of a series of projects to kickstart the island state’s emerging green hydrogen sector, while also helping to power the mainland.

“The BOWE project is uniquely positioned to support many of the Tasmanian government’s recent announcements including Marinus Link, Battery of the Nation and the Bell Bay Hydrogen Hub,” Kierse said.

For Equinor, the project gives the global giant more of a foot in the door on Australia’s nascent offshore experience to develop offshore wind market, which is rapidly developing a long list of project proposals backed by enthusiastic state and federal governments.

See RenewEconomy’s Offshore Wind Farm Map of Australia

Already, Equinor has bought into three proposed offshore wind farms in New South Wales – each of up to 2GW off the coast of Newcastle, the Illawarra and Eden – in a deal struck with Australian developer OceanEx in August.

“As we continue to see momentum grow for the offshore wind industry in Australia, we’re excited to join Nexsphere and further progress the Bass Offshore Wind Energy project,” said Equinor’s senior director for offshore wind in Australia, Thomas Hansen.

“The Bass Strait is a world class offshore wind resource, and this project is well placed to support Australia’s energy transition and Tasmania’s goal to double the production of green electricity by 2040.”

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Contentious solar project scrapped after work fails to start on time

After another change of hands, a solar project opposed by some locals has missed its…

7 April 2026

Coal to liquids: Coalition’s latest energy brain-fart is their craziest yet, and that takes some doing

Coalition's proposed solution to the fossil fuel crisis is its craziest yet. Meanwhile, credible solutions…

7 April 2026

Local council seeks annual $100,000 per road maintenance fee from wind and solar developers

A council at the heart of major wind and solar projects wants renewable energy developers…

7 April 2026

Home batteries get bigger and bigger, as race to beat rebate changes sparks last-ditch frenzy

A last-ditch scramble to get maximum value from the Cheaper Home Batteries rebate has "shattered"…

7 April 2026

Bill shock: The up to $420 price gap between “median” electricity plans and lowest deals on offer

Difference between median retail electricity market offers and the lowest offer available to households could…

7 April 2026

The market rule maker has hit its limit on gas. Now it’s government’s turn

With submissions closing April 30 on a landmark gas network rule change, the real question…

7 April 2026