Sustainable Marine and Offshore Systems for a Net-Zero Future

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Institute for Integrated Energy Systems (IESVic), Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science, University of Victoria (UVic), Victoria, BC, Canada
Interests: wave energy converters; hybrid ocean platforms; power generation; back-to-back converters; fuzzy logic control; sliding mode control; artificial neural networks; metaheuristics algorithms
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Guest Editor
Department of Computer Architecture and Automatic Control, Faculty of Physics, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Interests: wave energy; wind energy; oscillating water columns; offshore wind turbines; fault tolerant systems

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The global urgency to mitigate climate change is driving transformative changes in the marine and offshore sectors. The European Union has adopted a set of ambitious climate, energy, transport, and taxation policy proposals, aiming to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 (compared to 1990 levels). This is a central pillar of the European Green Deal, which commits the EU to becoming climate-neutral by 2050, building its economy with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions. Similarly, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has set targets to reduce CO₂ emissions by 40% by 2030 (compared to 2008 levels) and to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.

In pursuit of these goals, offshore and maritime systems are emerging as critical enablers of this energy transition. The offshore domain holds immense potential for renewable energy generation, carbon capture and storage (CCS), and decarbonized marine transport:

  • EU targets for renewables to contribute at least 42.5% of energy, which will require that the currently installed wind capacity grows to more than 500 GW by 2030. Floating offshore wind turbines (FOWTs) and hybrid wind–wave energy platforms represent the next frontier in marine renewable energy, being able to be deployed in deep waters and expand resource accessibility.
  • Starting in 2040, the European Commission estimates that the EU will need to capture and permanently store approximately 250 million tonnes of CO₂ per year to remain on track for climate neutrality by 2050. Offshore geological formations provide the most viable and scalable storage capacity for this goal.
  • Green shipping corridors and innovations in sustainable marine propulsion are essential to decarbonizing global trade. Today, approximately 85% of global goods and 35% of energy products are transported by ocean-going vessels. However, the shipping sector alone contributes around 3% of global GHG emissions.

In this context, the convergence of offshore renewable energy, carbon storage infrastructure, and green maritime technologies is no longer optional—it is essential. However, the integration of these systems poses complex engineering and environmental challenges, including multi-physics modeling, system control under uncertainty, lifecycle assessment, and policy coordination across sectors.

This Special Issue seeks to bring together cross-disciplinary research that addresses these challenges and accelerates the deployment of sustainable technologies in the ocean domain. By highlighting innovative approaches in marine engineering, floating structures, offshore energy conversion, and carbon management, we aim to support the global effort toward climate neutrality and a resilient blue economy.

Dr. Fares M’zoughi
Dr. Payam Aboutalebi
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • offshore wind energy systems
  • floating offshore wind turbines
  • floating hybrid energy systems
  • structural analysis and design
  • coupled hydrodynamic–aerodynamic–structural modeling
  • environmental impact and lifecycle assessment of offshore systems
  • numerical and experimental methods for offshore wind systems
  • wave and tidal energy systems
  • offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS) infrastructure
  • marine engineering innovations supporting carbon-neutral operations
  • green shipping corridors and decarbonized maritime transport
  • digital twins, control systems, and hybrid testing methods for offshore platforms

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

33 pages, 12405 KB  
Review
Advances in Smart Coating Technologies for Wind Turbine Blade Protection: A Focus on Self-Healing and Anti-Erosion Performance
by Mohamad Alsaadi, Leon Mishnaevsky, Jr., Edmond Francis Tobin and Declan M. Devine
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(12), 2224; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13122224 - 21 Nov 2025
Viewed by 442
Abstract
Leading-edge erosion (LEE) of wind-turbine blades, driven primarily by rain erosion, particulate erosion, and environmental ageing, remains one of the most pervasive causes of performance loss and maintenance cost in offshore and onshore wind farms. Self-healing coatings, which autonomously or semi-autonomously restore barriers [...] Read more.
Leading-edge erosion (LEE) of wind-turbine blades, driven primarily by rain erosion, particulate erosion, and environmental ageing, remains one of the most pervasive causes of performance loss and maintenance cost in offshore and onshore wind farms. Self-healing coatings, which autonomously or semi-autonomously restore barriers and mechanical function after damage, promise a paradigm shift in blade protection by combining immediate impact resistance with in-service reparability. This review surveys the state of the art in self-healing coating technologies (intrinsic chemistries such as non-covalent interactions or dynamic covalent bonds; extrinsic systems including micro/nanocapsules and microvascular networks) and evaluates their suitability for anti-erosion, mechanical robustness, and multifunctional protection of leading edges. The outcomes of theoretical, experimental, modelling and field-oriented studies on the leading-edge protection and coating characterisation identify which self-healing concepts best meet the simultaneous requirements of toughness, adhesion, surface finish, and long-term durability of wind blade applications. Key gaps are highlighted, notably trade-offs between healing efficiency and mechanical toughness, challenges in large-area and sprayable application methods, and the need for standardised characterisation and testing of self-healing coating protocols. We propose a roadmap for targeted materials research, accelerated testing, and field trials. This review discusses recent studies to guide materials scientists and renewable-energy engineers toward promising routes to deployable, multifunctional, self-healing anti-erosion coatings, especially for wind-energy infrastructure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Marine and Offshore Systems for a Net-Zero Future)
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