TY - JOUR
T1 - Maritime labour regimes in the North Atlantic offshore wind energy industry: On the socialization of labour and the structural power of the working class
AU - Westgard-Cruice, William
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - This article examines the emergence and transformation of maritime labour regimes in the North Atlantic offshore wind energy industry. Drawing on an array of published materials, observation at industry conferences, and semi-structured interviews with workers, managers, trade union officials, and others involved in the offshore wind industry in Northwestern Europe and the United States, the article analyses the development of labour regimes through an analysis of the contradictions between the production of use value and the production of surplus value. Through this dialectical approach, the article shows how the particular natural conditions and competitive dynamics of offshore wind power production necessitate an increasing socialization of labour, generating greater bargaining power for some skilled workers and more favourable conditions for collective organization. Through a discussion of recent industrial actions in two different divisions of the offshore wind energy industry, the article then shows how some workers are leveraging their structural power to contest an individualization of class relations. It concludes by arguing that the offshore wind industry is not simply a new frontier of capital accumulation, but potentially also a key terrain for the reconstitution of working-class power.
AB - This article examines the emergence and transformation of maritime labour regimes in the North Atlantic offshore wind energy industry. Drawing on an array of published materials, observation at industry conferences, and semi-structured interviews with workers, managers, trade union officials, and others involved in the offshore wind industry in Northwestern Europe and the United States, the article analyses the development of labour regimes through an analysis of the contradictions between the production of use value and the production of surplus value. Through this dialectical approach, the article shows how the particular natural conditions and competitive dynamics of offshore wind power production necessitate an increasing socialization of labour, generating greater bargaining power for some skilled workers and more favourable conditions for collective organization. Through a discussion of recent industrial actions in two different divisions of the offshore wind energy industry, the article then shows how some workers are leveraging their structural power to contest an individualization of class relations. It concludes by arguing that the offshore wind industry is not simply a new frontier of capital accumulation, but potentially also a key terrain for the reconstitution of working-class power.
KW - Offshore wind energy
KW - Renewable energy
KW - Labour
KW - Trade unions
KW - Structural power
U2 - 10.1177/02637758251397514
DO - 10.1177/02637758251397514
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1472-3433
JO - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
JF - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
ER -