11/11/2025 | Floating wind

Kincardine Floating Offshore Wind Farm. Credit: Flotation Energy Kincardine Floating Offshore Wind Farm. Credit: Flotation Energy

Report shows 13% increase in floating offshore wind capacity worldwide

Image credit: Flotation Energy

11 November 2025 - RenewableUK press release


RenewableUK’s latest EnergyPulse Insights Floating Offshore Wind report shows that, despite political headwinds, floating wind installations have increased by 13% over the past twelve months to 277 megawatts (MW) - up from 245MW a year ago – and are set to grown nearly ten-fold to 2,500MW by 2030.


In total, 16 projects are fully operational across seven countries. Norway currently has the most operational capacity at 100MW across three projects. The UK is in second place with 78MW across two projects, and China is third with 40MW (five projects). Immediate growth prospects remain strong with 93MW ender construction globally across four projects (two in France, two in China).



Globally, there are 221 gigawatts (GW) of floating capacity at all stages of development across 324 projects.


By 2030, China and the UK are set to dominate the market with 45% and 41% of global capacity respectively. Activity in other key floating wind markets such as France, Norway and Japan expected to accelerate in the 2030s.


Although Italy has the largest pipeline of future projects, most of them are at an early stage of development, with none operational or under construction yet. The UK has moved up from third place to second, overtaking the USA where the report states most projects are on hold due to political uncertainty.



60% (134GW) of floating wind capacity announced so far worldwide is being developed in European waters. 14% of the global floating project portfolio is in UK waters (31GW across 39 projects), 84% of which is in Scottish waters (26GW across 31 projects).


In the UK, five projects (458MW) are eligible to compete in the upcoming round of contracts to generate clean power, Allocation Round 7. The report states that the current budget for this round is likely to procure two or three new projects.


RenewableUK’s Head of Floating and Deepwater Wind Luke Clark said:


“The continued growth of floating wind globally highlights the UK’s opportunity to become a world leader in this technology. Strategic investment in early projects is vital to prime the supply chain and build confidence in the sector. More ambition in this year’s CfD round would see more test and demonstration projects coming through to unlock supply chain development, cut costs, and create jobs.


“Floating wind has the potential to be one of Britain’s biggest industrial success stories of this century, employing 97,000 people by 2050, with many of the jobs based in Scottish and Welsh ports, contributing £47 billion to our economy by building and supplying projects here as well as exporting our cutting-edge technology worldwide”.


The report comes a day before RenewableUK’s two-day Floating Offshore Wind conference and exhibition opens in Aberdeen.


More details on our EnergyPulse reports and access to the full interactive database, which is available to RenewableUK members and EnergyPulse subscribers, are available here.


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Notes


For further information, contact


Robert Norris, Head of Communications
07969 229 913 | Robert.Norris@RenewableUK.com



  1. RenewableUK’s members are building our future energy system, powered by clean electricity. We bring them together to deliver that future faster; a future which is better for industry, billpayers, and the environment. We support around 500 member companies to ensure increasing amounts of renewable electricity are deployed across the UK and to access export markets all over the world. Our members are business leaders, technology innovators, and expert thinkers from right across industry.


  2. The statistics in the report were finalised on 3 November 2025.


  3. RenewableUK’s events programme is available here.