Karl E. Humberson: Dominion Energy Exec Steers Mammoth Offshore Wind Power Project Through Ocean of Challenges


 Karl E. Humberson

Karl E. Humberson jokes that his leadership role to build the country’s largest offshore wind energy project—Dominion Energy’s $10-billion, 178-turbine CVOW off the Virginia coast that is on track to finish by the end of 2026—started as a respite from subzero temperatures endured on a Midwest gas project for the firm. “When I got back to my hotel room, I received a call asking if I’d be willing to help in construction” of something new­ hundreds of miles east—giant ocean-based machines set to generate 2.6 GW of power in a 113,000-acre site 27 miles offshore. “They could have asked me to be a fry cook and I would have said yes in that moment.”

In a more serious note, the Dominion project manager says his instinct to take on the challenge now involves managing a global supply chain, complex logistics and changing politics to install giant Siemens Gamesa-made turbines that each are 869 ft at tip height and generate 14.7 MW, as well as large support infrastructure, all in a risky physical environment—project conditions “I’ve always been drawn to,” he says.

Joining the company in 2011 with a marine engineering degree and energy sector experience, and elevated last July to vice president of offshore wind construction, Humberson steers ahead in a sector pushing to recover from inflation, supply chain gaps and approval politics during the first Trump administration that reversed under President Joe Biden but could reemerge based on erratic campaign comments by now President-elect Donald Trump.

As a regulated utility, with set project returns and ratepayer charges hard won from regulators, and with key contractors and costs mostly locked in before COVID-19, Dominion has avoided many financial woes facing commercial developers. CVOW “is a credible testament to the capability to build wind farms at large scale,” says Theodore Paradise, an attorney and policy expert at developer CTC Global.

“Once you get your head wrapped around the scale of the components, which is astounding, you realize that … moving things around the world becomes rather complex,” says Humberson. He gained insights in building CVOW’s two pilot turbines in 2020, While only 6 MW each, they now offer “actual reliability statistics for modeling” generation and have aided regulators in permit approvals, he says.

Humberson also oversaw offsite construction in Texas of Charybdis, the 472-ft-long turbine-installing vessel soon to arrive at CVOW. It is the first to meet decades old federal rules allowing only domestic vessels on offshore wind sites. U.S. developers now must use a convoluted, costly transfer of foreign-made components and barge-assisted installation. Fabrication delays cancelled the vessel’s earlier use by other developers and caused a price hike to $715 million, but Humberson says these are balanced by the old method’s bigger costs and risks.

crane cab

Humberson, on the right. in the cab of giant Orion crane, takes in view at CVOW marshalling site in Portsmouth, Va., with DEME first crane operator Gary Waumans, before the equipment supplied by the Belgiun-based contractor is loaded on a vessel to install foundations at sea for the project’s 176 wind turbines, each 14.7 MW.
Photo courtesy of Dominion Energy

Work is on track, with 82 turbine foundations installed as of CVOW’s late
October project halt for whale migration. It will restart in spring,
boosted now by a $2.6-billion private investor deal last year with Stonepeak for a 50%
project stake. 

Humberson says the project’s steady progress has
boosted supply chain confidence. South Korean manufacturer unit LS
Greenlink in 2024 announced a $681-million high-voltage subsea cable
plant in Chesapeake, Va., first in the U.S., with Virginia Gov. Glenn
Youngkin (R) saying it “will showcase the [state] as a leader in offshore
wind industry manufacturing.” 

Mark D. Mitchell, senior vice
president of all Dominion energy project construction, points to Humberson’s management chops. “Beside having
excellent commercial and construction skills and being a problem solver,
Karl develops his employees by getting them as much exposure to all
facets of project management,” he says. CVOW is “a fascinating
megaproject and being the first U.S. utility to construct, own and
operate one of the world’s largest offshore wind projects has drawn …
talented employees who want to be on the ground floor of something special.”

Observers note the importance of this project succeeding. “Very few power plants are that big, and no other form of generation could be built in two years,” says Willett Kemp, professor of engineering and marine science at the University of Delaware and a nationally known expert on offshore wind power and policy issues. “Virginia needs electricity and there’s only one project ready to go,”

He add that CVOW “would advance the learning rate and supply chain of the offshore wind industry overall. Delays, especially for a project already permitted and ready to build, would be expensive and damaging to Virginia. Hopefully the president-elect and his advisors will make the right tradeoffs.”

Humberson notes more potential work in developing remaining Dominion offshore wind lease sites, or in other of its growing energy areas.

“I feel like the industry didn’t think we would be where we are today,” he says.



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