Assessing ice risks for offshore wind development in the Great Lakes
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2026
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Details
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Journal Title:Ocean Engineering
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Description:The Laurentian Great Lakes represent a vast and largely untapped potential for offshore wind energy that is crucial for regional decarbonization, energy security, and economic development. However, seasonal freshwater ice introduces unique engineering and operational risks, especially since limited availability of ice data poses challenges to safe and cost-effective design. To address this gap, we apply a fully coupled three-dimensional hydrodynamic-ice model (FVCOM–CICE) to simulate ice conditions across all five Great Lakes over an 83-year period (1940–2022). The model, validated against satellite and in-situ measurements, yields detailed spatial and temporal distributions of ice concentration, thickness, and velocity. To provide an integrated assessment for wind energy development, a composite ice intensity index is introduced by synthesizing ice momentum, packed ice risk, and icing severity. This index enables site-specific quantification of overall ice hazards to support more robust wind turbine siting, design, and risk mitigation. A case study is also presented to demonstrate practical applications of simulated ice data in evaluating ISO/IEC design ice load limits on offshore wind platforms. Results reveal that extreme ice hazards are prevalent in Lake Erie, Lake Huron, and parts of Lake Superior, while Lake Ontario and central and southern regions of Lake Michigan exhibit consistently lower ice risks. This paper offers a foundation for resilient offshore wind infrastructure and supports multi-criteria decision frameworks in this region.
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Source:Ocean Engineering, 357, 125327
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DOI:
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ISSN:0029-8018
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Rights Information:CC BY-NC
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Compliance:Submitted
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Main Document Checksum:urn:sha-512:5a3763cbbafebfe6dcdbb621af4df2112b93627c332de8f35463a5a9a52e341141b4316321f9f5e1234ebdfcf3e4c7b9e2791679c5f3b08f5d8ba040a4045a64
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