
World's Largest Offshore Wind Farm to Power Millions by 2030
China is building the world's largest offshore wind farm in deep waters off Guangdong Province, set to generate enough clean energy to power millions of homes annually. By 2030, this engineering marvel will produce over 50 billion kilowatt-hours of renewable electricity each year.
Seventy kilometers off China's western Guangdong coast, where ocean depths plunge beyond 50 meters, construction crews are building something extraordinary that will help reshape how the world generates power.
The world's largest offshore wind farm by transmission capacity is rising from these deep waters. When completed by 2030, it will pump out more than 50 billion kilowatt-hours of clean energy every single year.
To put that in perspective, 50 billion kilowatt-hours could power roughly 15 million homes for an entire year. That's the equivalent of taking millions of gas-powered cars off the road permanently.
The project sits in challenging deep-sea territory, where strong ocean currents and extreme depths make construction far more complex than coastal installations. Engineers are pioneering new techniques to anchor massive turbines in waters that would have been considered impossible to develop just a decade ago.
This wind farm represents more than just impressive engineering. It's a cornerstone of China's 15th Five-Year Plan, which aims to accelerate the country's transition away from fossil fuels while creating new economic opportunities in green technology sectors.

The timing matters globally. As countries worldwide race to meet climate commitments, China is positioning itself to generate roughly half of its electricity from non-fossil sources by 2030, a target that seemed ambitious just years ago.
The Ripple Effect
This single project will prevent hundreds of millions of tons of carbon emissions over its lifetime. That's clean air benefiting communities far beyond Guangdong Province.
The construction is also creating thousands of skilled jobs in offshore engineering, turbine manufacturing, and marine technology. These aren't temporary positions but career pathways in industries that will only grow as renewable energy expands.
Other coastal nations are watching closely. The technologies and methods developed in these deep waters could unlock similar offshore wind potential in regions previously considered too challenging for development.
The project proves that renewable energy can scale to meet massive demand. When countries commit to clean energy transitions, innovation follows, making what once seemed impossible not just feasible but economically viable.
By the end of this decade, turbines spinning in the South China Sea will quietly power cities, homes, and businesses with nothing but ocean breezes.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Wind Energy
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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