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Boskalis Commits to New Cable-Laying Vessel to Meet Growing Offshore Wind Demand
By MGN Editorial•May 18, 2026 at 12:00 PM
Dutch marine contractor Boskalis has ordered a new high-capacity cable-laying vessel targeting the expanding offshore wind and interconnector markets, reinforcing the sector's continued infrastructure investment momentum.
## Boskalis Expands Fleet with New Cable-Laying Vessel
Dutch dredging and marine services giant Boskalis has placed an order for a new high-capacity cable-laying vessel (CLV), according to Offshore Energy, with the newbuild specifically designed to serve the rapidly growing offshore wind and subsea interconnector markets.
The investment underscores the accelerating demand for specialist installation tonnage as governments and energy developers push ahead with ambitious offshore wind targets across Europe, Asia-Pacific, and North America. Cable-laying capacity has emerged as one of the critical bottlenecks in the offshore wind supply chain, with project developers increasingly competing for access to a limited pool of purpose-built vessels capable of handling the heavy, high-voltage export cables required by modern large-scale wind farms.
### Strategic Positioning in a Competitive Market
Boskalis, already an established player in the offshore energy services sector through its DEME partnership history and its own Boskalis Offshore Energy division, is positioning itself to capture a greater share of the cable installation market as project pipelines swell. The new CLV will complement the company's existing marine assets and is expected to target both offshore wind farm array and export cable contracts, as well as the growing number of cross-border electricity interconnector projects linking national grids across Europe and beyond.
The interconnector segment represents a significant and often overlooked growth driver for CLV operators. As energy transition policies push nations toward greater grid integration and renewable energy trading, demand for long-distance subsea power cable installation is forecast to rise substantially through the end of the decade.
### Industry Context
The order reflects a broader industry trend of marine contractors and specialist vessel owners committing capital to newbuild programmes despite elevated shipyard costs and extended delivery lead times. With offshore wind installation activity expected to intensify significantly between 2026 and 2032, securing purpose-built tonnage now is widely regarded as essential for contractors seeking to remain competitive.
Full specifications of the vessel, including its cable-carrying capacity, laying speed, and anticipated delivery date, were not disclosed in the initial announcement. Further details are expected as the project progresses through the design and construction phases.
*Source: Offshore Energy*
#cable-laying vessel#offshore wind#Boskalis#subsea cables#interconnectors#marine contractors#vessel newbuild#offshore energy
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