Image: Simply Blue Group
In the past three years offshore wind has been made the punching bag for anti-renewables misinformation, lies, and propaganda. Peter Dutton’s political campaign against offshore wind created sovereign risk, stalled projects and stymied genuine engagement with communities.
But it could not deliver the Coalition the election. Prime minister Anthony Albanese now has a clear mandate to deliver a truly ambitious shift to renewable energy. Offshore wind has emerged strong, and has a critical role to play powering communities, manufacturing and heavy industry.
As shown in the Climate Council’s Election 2025 Report, “the ALP’s two-party preferred support increased in most seats with offshore wind debates, despite significant campaigns against the projects.”
Notably, in the Hunter and Illawarra – regions where Dutton promised to cancel proposed offshore wind projects – electorates saw sizeable swings away from the Coalition and towards Labor and its commitment to offshore wind.
This is an opportunity to reset the approach, to acknowledge that offshore wind is a key plank of Australia’s future energy mix, essential to decarbonising heavy industry and other big energy users, and take the actions necessary to support the industry in this critical early stage.
Albanese now has the opportunity to move beyond declaring where offshore wind can be developed to set out a more ambitious policy that builds the industry.
There are currently six offshore wind zones declared around Australia, representing roughly 23 gigawatts (GW) of capacity of viable projects, many of them located in industrial regions close to large load centres – the Hunter, Illawarra and Bunbury zones all being clear examples.
Victoria is currently leading the way on offshore wind policy, with its ambitious target of reaching 4 GW by 2035 and 9 GW by 2040. Offshore wind will play a key role in deep decarbonisation of Victoria’s electricity system, providing a form of variable baseload that complements onshore wind in the state’s west. Contracts for the state’s first offshore wind auctions will be signed in 2026, providing certainty for investors.
But Victoria’s target alone will not be enough to establish an entire new industry that will necessarily be national in scope, with manufacturing sites and offshore wind ports likely distributed throughout the country.
There is a clear gap and need for a national platform for offshore wind that would need to include:
While Trump is wreaking havoc on the US offshore wind industry, with the right strategies Australia could well become a safe haven for the industry, attracting billions in capital investment, highly skilled labor and innovative new businesses.
In the past three years we have been stuck in a conversation about whether offshore wind is acceptable or not, which stymied genuine engagement with communities about what local projects might look like, and the benefits that they want to see.
Now that nuclear and the anti-renewables campaign has been defeated politically, Australia can get back to the nuts and bolts of how we will establish this new industry – and in a way that supports the aspirations of host communities and society more broadly.
The first building blocks for offshore wind have been established through the declaration of offshore wind zones. Now it’s time for Anthony Albanese to build on that foundation and deliver a more ambitious plan to establish an offshore wind industry in Australia for the long-term.
Pat Simons is Yes 2 Renewables campaigns coordinator at Friends of the Earth. Anna Mackiewicz is Yes2Renewables NSW organiser.
Claims and promises of carbon offset schemes are falling deep into the category of being…
Australia has just experienced its worst heatwave in six years but it's set to become…
There will be daily cap on the federal government's Shared Solar free power offer, to…
Developer of what was once hailed as the biggest solar hybrid project cuts PV component…
Fortescue wind technology company says its turbines will be the "tallest, mightiest and the widest,"…
Rooftop solar reaches remarkable 117 pct of state demand in Australia's most advanced renewable state,…