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Maritime Industry Briefing: Offshore Wind Capacity Set to Quadruple, Tanker Fires Mount Off Oman

By MGN EditorialJune 11, 2026 at 12:00 PM

A new GWEC report projects global offshore wind capacity will quadruple by 2035, while a third tanker has suffered an engine room fire off Oman amid escalating tensions linked to US enforcement actions against Iranian port blockade-runners.

## Offshore Wind Capacity Poised for Dramatic Growth by 2035 Global offshore wind capacity is on track to quadruple within the next decade, according to the Global Wind Energy Council's (GWEC) newly released 2026 Global Offshore Wind Report. The council is urging governments worldwide to accelerate the development and construction of offshore wind farms, arguing that faster deployment would serve as a strategic buffer against future energy crises. The GWEC report, cited by Splash247, frames offshore wind not merely as a clean energy solution but as a tool for national energy security — a message likely to resonate with policymakers still navigating the economic aftershocks of recent global energy market volatility. The council's call to action reflects growing consensus that the pace of permitting, grid integration, and supply chain development must increase substantially if the projected capacity targets are to be met. For the maritime industry, the offshore wind boom carries significant implications. Demand for specialised installation vessels, crew transfer vessels (CTVs), and service operation vessels (SOVs) is expected to rise sharply, while port infrastructure investment will be required to support fabrication, staging, and maintenance operations at scale. --- ## Third Tanker Struck by Engine Room Fire Off Oman A third tanker has suffered an engine room fire in waters off Oman this week, according to Seatrade Maritime, compounding what is becoming a serious pattern of incidents in the region. The two earlier fires this week were reportedly caused by US forces disabling vessels alleged to have violated a blockade of Iranian ports. The incidents highlight the increasingly volatile operational environment in the Gulf of Oman and surrounding waters, where geopolitical tensions are translating directly into physical risks for commercial shipping. Engine room fires represent one of the most dangerous casualty types at sea, with the potential to rapidly escalate into total losses and threaten crew safety. The precise circumstances surrounding the third vessel have not yet been fully confirmed, but the clustering of incidents within a single week will raise urgent questions among shipowners, insurers, and flag states operating in the region. War risk and hull underwriters are likely to be monitoring the situation closely, and operators with vessels transiting the area are advised to review their risk assessments accordingly. The incidents also add a new dimension to ongoing discussions about freedom of navigation, the legal parameters of maritime enforcement actions, and the responsibilities of flag states when commercial vessels are targeted or disabled by military forces. --- *Sources: Splash247, Seatrade Maritime*
#offshore wind#GWEC#tanker safety#engine room fire#Gulf of Oman#energy security#war risk#Iranian sanctions#offshore energy#maritime security

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