Orlen moves forward with second offshore wind farm as Baltic East secures environmental permit
Orlen has taken a major step toward expanding Poland’s offshore wind capacity. The company’s Baltic East project has received its environmental decision from the Regional Directorate for Environmental Protection (RDOŚ) in Gdańsk — a key milestone that enables the project to enter Poland’s first offshore wind auction this December.
business power engineering maritime economy offshore news18 november 2025 | 12:51 | Source: Gazeta Morska | Prepared by: Kamil Kusier | Print

fot. ORLEN Neptun
The planned wind farm will have an installed capacity of approximately 1 GW, enough to supply clean electricity to more than 1.25 million households.
Strategic momentum for Poland’s offshore sector
According to Orlen CEO Ireneusz Fąfara, the environmental permit not only positions Baltic East for participation in the upcoming offshore wind auction, but also strengthens opportunities for domestic suppliers. Orlen aims for up to 50% local content across the project’s entire lifecycle.
Janusz Bil, CEO of Orlen Neptun, highlights the rapid progression of the permitting process, enabled by the expertise of the project team. The company is advancing workstreams related to financing and construction permits, targeting 2032 for first power from Baltic East.
Strong involvement of Polish industry
Dozens of Polish companies have already contributed to early-stage development, including:
- seven firms contracted for installation terminal services,
- over a dozen advisory and engineering companies,
- a consortium of three Polish entities responsible for seismic and geotechnical surveys.
Comprehensive environmental studies confirmed that Baltic East’s technical and operational solutions effectively mitigate impacts on the marine environment and avian migration routes, including designated flight corridors and noise-reduction measures.
Path to auction and construction
The environmental permit is a prerequisite for Baltic East’s participation in Poland’s first offshore wind auction, which will award up to 4 GW of capacity under a Contracts for Difference (CfD) support scheme.
The project already holds:
- a location permit (PSZW),
- preliminary grid connection conditions,
- a permit for cable laying in internal and territorial waters (PUUK),
- and is advancing detailed design documentation required for construction permits.
Project location and sector impact
Baltic East will be built on a 110 km² site located 22.5 km off the Baltic Sea coast, adjacent to the Baltic Power wind farm, which Orlen and Northland Power plan to commission next year.
Baltic East is one of six offshore concessions held by Orlen on the Polish Baltic. Parallel development continues on Baltic West, covering four concessions near the Odra Bank. According to the company’s long-term strategy, full build-out of all offshore projects is expected by 2040.
Buy us a coffee, and we’ll invest in great maritime journalism! Support Gazeta Morska and help us sail forward – click here!
Kamil Kusier
redaktor naczelny
comments
Add the first comment
see also
Navantia and Fincantieri deepen cooperation on the european patrol corvette programme
Galeon Yachts and Meyer Shank Racing: merging luxury yachts with motorsport expertise
Unmanned systems and naval firepower modules. WB Group showcases integrated capabilities at Enforce Tac 2026
Swedish ports record lowest ship calls in 18 years. Implications for the maritime sector
February in Szczecin’s shiprepair sector. Ice, overhauls and North Sea expansion
Advanced ROV trials conducted at CTO to validate subsea technologies for offshore applications
University of Gdańsk and PGZ Naval Shipyard join forces for innovation and security
Stadt Naval to deliver electric propulsion system for Polish rescue vessel Ratownik
Gdańsk port’s Basen Górniczy to gain modern port infrastructure
First month of Jantar Unity operations. Polsca ferry paves the way for Batory program units
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT