Offshore Wind Farms Can Interfere with Ship Radar and Navigation, Says New Report
Media Advisory
By Megan Lowry
Last update February, 22 2022
WASHINGTON — Offshore wind farms can interfere with navigational radar used by ships and smaller vessels to avoid collisions, posing challenges for safe maritime navigation, says a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
The maritime community has expressed concern that wind turbine generators could interfere with radar, complicating navigation for both large vessels passing through shipping channels near offshore wind farms, and smaller vessels navigating through or adjacent to the structures. Previous studies that examined this question relied on data from European wind farms — however, wind turbines in offshore wind farms located in or planned for the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf are larger, and spaced farther apart than those included in past studies.
The report concludes wind turbine generators have significant electromagnetic reflectivity, and therefore can interfere with radar systems operating nearby. The rotating blades can also create reflections in Doppler radar systems. In particular, these forms of interference could obfuscate smaller vessels and stationary objects such as buoys on radar, complicating navigation decisions and increasing the risk of collision with larger vessels. Maritime search and rescue teams also rely on radar to find smaller boats — their primary targets — and interference could therefore also complicate rescue operations near wind farms.
The report recommends the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and other relevant agencies pursue practicable options to mitigate the interference of wind farms, such as by implementing enhanced training and using reference buoys, among other options. The agency should also pursue further research to fill remaining gaps in understanding how offshore wind farms affect radar used for navigation.
Members of the committee will discuss the report during a public webinar today at 10 a.m. EST.
DETAILS: Wind Turbine Generator Impacts to Marine Vessel Radar is available for immediate release. Media inquiries should be directed to the National Academies’ Office of News and Public Information; tel. 202-334-2138 or e-mail news@nas.edu.
Contact:
Megan Lowry, Media Officer
Office of News and Public Information
202-334-2138; e-mail news@nas.edu
Featured Publication
Consensus
·2022
Offshore wind energy development is poised to expand rapidly across the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf over the next decade, as part of a government-wide effort to develop more renewable sources of energy. Offshore wind energy planning and development has expanded along the U.S. Atlantic Coast, and to...
View details