Equinor has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Korean East-West Power (EWP) to cooperate on 3GW of floating offshore wind projects in South Korea.
Together the partners will contribute to the country’s ongoing energy transition and development of an offshore wind industry in Korea.
The South Korean government has set out an ambition to grow renewables by about 60GW to 2034, of which 12GW is targeted for offshore wind by 2030.
Equinor’s partnership with EWP, one of Korea’s state-owned power generation companies, provides a strong basis to take a leading role in developing a pipeline of offshore wind projects needed, the company said.
Equinor Renewables executive vice president Pal Eitrheim said: “South Korea aims to become one of the leading global markets for offshore wind in the next decade.
“Together with EWP, we are ready to contribute to the country’s plans, in the short and the long-term.
“We want to develop the first commercial floating offshore wind farm in South Korea.
“We have worked with the Korean supply chain for many years and know its qualities and capabilities.
“We see a big potential to leverage our experience in building a new industry together with Korea’s world-class supply chain.”
The MoU between Equinor and EWP is part of the former’s strategy of accelerating profitable growth in renewables by creating value from early access at scale in attractive markets, in collaboration with partners that share its vision and goals.
Equinor aims to bring its decades of floating wind experience and offshore technology to the partnership, including O&M expertise.


