Offshore wind O&M: where the value is really won and lost

Jun 16, 2026 | Reading time: 4 min

Offshore wind turbines in sea at dusk with substation in background

 

The hardest part of keeping an offshore wind farm running well isn't the engineering. It's the choreography.

Picture a single turbine taken offline by a minor fault - a task a competent technician could complete within an afternoon. And yet, the turbine remains idle and unproductive for several days. Not because there is a lack of skill to fix it, but because the repair is waiting on a vessel, which is waiting on weather, which is waiting on a schedule that was never built to flex.

This is the quiet truth of offshore wind operations and maintenance (O&M). The cost of running an offshore wind farm is only partially determined by the difficulty of any individual repair. It is significantly shaped by everything that happens between the repairs – the coordination, the sequencing, the handoffs between providers. That is where operational value is created, and just as often, where it is lost.

 

Where value is lost

For most offshore wind asset owners and operators, O&M is delivered through a series of separate relationships. One provider for routine O&M, balance of plant engineering (BoP), blade support, another for the high-voltage and electrical systems, others again for cranes, vessels and crew, digital services, etc. Each is capable, and each performs their role well. The inefficiencies arise in the spaces between them.

These costs do not always appear on an invoice. They emerge instead as stacked downtime, when one discipline waits on another to complete its work. As duplicated mobilisations, with separate crews making individual journeys to the same site for tasks that could have shared a single access window. As delayed decisions, when an issue must pass through several contracts before anyone is positioned to act. And, increasingly, as the unanticipated demands of an ageing fleet – components to source, equipment operating beyond its original design assumptions, and lifetime-extension questions that no single party owns from end to end.

Individually, none of these is significant. Collectively, they represent the difference between an asset that simply operates and one that maximises performance. Managing the multiple contractual interfaces to coordinate activities becomes a major headache for asset owners and operators.

 

Where value is created

The improvement lies less in performing each task more proficiently and more in connecting the tasks – creating efficiencies.

Value is created when the schedule is treated as a single, coordinated whole rather than a series of separate line items – when general O&M, blade, BoP, electrical, crane, crew and vessel work, for example, are deliberately sequenced into shared access windows, ensuring that each visit offshore is fully utilised first time. It is created when spare parts and components are always available when needed. It is created when one team holds a single set of priorities, allowing decisions to be made in hours rather than weeks. And it is created when data, rather than estimation, informs the decision on what to inspect, when to intervene and what can safely be deferred.

None of this depends on a new technology so much as on a different operating model: one accountable view across the entire asset, in place of several disjointed partial ones.

 

What effective coordination looks like in practice

This is the guiding principle of  the Offshore Wind O&M Partnership (OWOP) - a strategic alliance of independent, UK-based specialists delivering the full scope of offshore wind O&M under a single, coordinated arrangement.

The significance is not simply that the capability resides in one place – routine O&M, turbine and blade work, high-voltage and BoP engineering, cranes, vessels, subsea services and digital monitoring. It is that the capability is genuinely coordinated. A formal alliance agreement and a shared governance framework ensure that one of the alliance companies will always serve as the primary contracting entity, acting as the single point of contact for the client, leading on the coordination of all aspects of work, and overseeing the accompanying risk management framework. Schedules are aligned rather than allowed to collide or pass like ships in the night. Mobilisations are shared rather than duplicated. Spare part and component procurement is optimised jointly. And the asset owner or operator manages one consistent accountable relationship in place of several.

It is a practical response to a practical problem: the value lost in the gaps is recovered by closing them.

 

The question worth asking

For an asset owner and/or operator evaluating O&M provision, the instinctive question is which provider delivers the best cost value on each individual task? However, it is not the most useful starting point.

The more valuable question is who is accountable overall? As that is where downtime is reduced, where ageing assets are kept productive for longer, and where management capacity is freed to focus on what lies ahead rather than on the most recent fault. O&M delivered in a genuinely coordinated way under a shared commercial structure does more than protect performance; it creates collective performance metrics. Incentives then align around uptime, not individual scope completion. A single contract for the asset owner or operator for the complete, coordinated set of O&M activities is the proven mechanism for achieving this. The result is greater efficiency, higher cost effectiveness, better delivery and extended asset life.

 

That is a transition worth making, and it is the discussion we will be continuing at Global Offshore Wind 2026 in Manchester, on the Innovation Theatre panel "Offshore O&M in practice: where value is created and where it's lost" (IT23, 10:00 BST). Joined by the OWOP alliance members and individual experts from RES, GEV Wind Power, Outreach Offshore and Camberwell Energy, we welcome the opportunity to continue the conversation there.