
FAQ – Offshore Wind Operations & Maintenance Course
For Training & Development Decision Makers
What is the primary objective of this course?
This course equips offshore wind professionals with practical, decision-focused knowledge of O&M strategy and asset management across the full wind farm lifecycle.
Participants learn to translate component-level maintenance knowledge, contractual structures, and operational data into actionable insight that directly supports:
- Early O&M strategy design and OPEX planning
- Contractual negotiation and responsibility allocation between developers and turbine manufacturers
- Maintenance decision-making across turbine, blade, cable, and foundation assets
- Long-term asset management and end-of-life planning
Who is this course designed for?
This is a foundational to intermediate-level course best suited to professionals building or broadening their understanding of offshore wind O&M, rather than senior professionals with deep operational expertise.
The program is well-suited to:
- Early- to Mid-Level Project Developers looking to understand what effective O&M planning looks like from the ground up
- Investors & Asset Owners who want a structured understanding of what drives operational costs, risks, and performance
- O&M Professionals Broadening Their Scope — technicians, engineers, or coordinators with experience in one area of O&M who want a fuller picture of the entire asset lifecycle
- Transitioning Professionals moving into offshore wind from adjacent sectors (onshore wind, oil & gas, marine, etc.) who need a solid foundation in offshore-specific O&M practice
- Project Finance & Commercial Teams who need operational literacy to make better-informed decisions
- Supply Chain & Procurement Professionals who want to understand how their work fits into the broader O&M picture
What makes this course different from other O&M training?
1. Dual-Perspective Instruction The course uniquely brings together the viewpoints of both a leading developer-consultant and a major turbine manufacturer, giving participants a grounded, balanced view of O&M responsibilities, contractual dynamics, and maintenance best practices — as they actually play out on active projects.
2. Full Lifecycle Coverage Rather than focusing on a single phase of operations, the course addresses the complete asset lifecycle — from pre-construction O&M strategy design through to managing ageing assets beyond 15 years of operation — across all major turbine and infrastructure components.
3. Applied, Not Academic The focus is on using O&M knowledge to inform real project decisions. Content is built around real-world case studies, scenario-based exercises, and a head-to-head debate format that reflects genuine industry tensions between developer and manufacturer perspectives.
4. Industry-Relevant Credibility The course includes:
- Instruction from professionals with 15+ years of experience each, representing both OWC (ABL Group) and GE Vernova
- Real-world case studies drawn from active offshore wind projects
- Interactive activities, applied discussions, and scenario-based exercises
What outcomes can employers expect?
Upon completion, participants will be able to:
- Construct a foundational O&M strategy incorporating OPEX modeling, KPI frameworks, and end-of-life planning
- Explain contractual structures between developers and turbine manufacturers and describe how these shape operational responsibilities
- Identify common failure modes and maintenance best practices for key turbine and infrastructure components across lifecycle stages
- Apply asset management strategies and relevant subsidy frameworks to support operational decision-making
- Evaluate how emerging technologies — including robotics, AI, and machine learning — can be integrated into an offshore O&M strategy
- Engage more effectively with O&M contractors, turbine manufacturers, and asset management teams
In short, attendees will move from passive data recipients to informed operational decision-makers.
What is the method of delivery?
The course is delivered online over two full days in a structured, instructor-led format that includes:
- Live virtual instruction with Q&A opportunities after each module
- Case-based learning drawn from real offshore wind projects
- Interactive scenario-based exercises
- A head-to-head debate between developer and manufacturer perspectives
- A post-course assessment
Participants engage directly with instructors and peers, creating a collaborative, industry-informed learning environment.
What topics are covered?
The course is structured across nine modules:
- Early O&M Strategy Design — OPEX modeling, KPI frameworks, and end-of-life planning
- Handover, Contracts & Shared Operations — Turbine supply agreements and the division of operational responsibilities
- Blades — Failure modes, inspection findings, and maintenance strategies across lifecycle stages
- Turbine — Common fault patterns and best-practice maintenance across lifecycle stages
- Cables — Failure patterns, monitoring strategies, and asset management
- Foundations — Inspection, maintenance, and asset management across lifecycle stages
- Transport & Installation — O&M implications of T&I decisions and lessons learned
- Marine Warranty Services — The role of marine warranty surveyors in O&M planning
- Emerging Technologies & the Future of Offshore O&M — Robotics, AI, machine learning, and predictive maintenance
Participants engage directly with instructors and peers, creating a collaborative, industry-informed learning environment.