Design and engineering consultancy Longitude has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Taiwanese Sinotech Engineering Consultants (Sinotech), to collaborate on offshore wind design and marine operations engineering in-country and for the wider Asia Pacific region.
“With Taiwan targeting 15.5 GW of offshore wind power by 2035, the market needs a competitive landscape and progressive design solutions to achieve these goals profitably, especially as projects move into deeper waters. Together with Sinotech, Longitude combines local expertise and capacity to explore joint opportunities and provide a broader, in-country offering to support clients.”
Jan Erik Berg, Longitude’s Global Director for Offshore Wind Design
“This is an exciting partnership for Taiwanese and Asia Pacific offshore wind. Through this MoU, we will integrate Sinotech’s strong in-country track record with Longitude’s global capability and experience in offshore wind design and marine operations engineering. Together we can provide an exciting alternative to the current market landscape, with the same client focus that we are both known for.”
Alan Chiou, Associate Vice President at Sinotech
Longitude provides expert end-to-end delivery of design and engineering projects in offshore wind and marine operations with a significant track record in offshore wind, including foundation design, subsea cables engineering, mobilisation engineering and jack-up engineering for offshore wind installation.
Longitude’s Asia Pacific operation is headquartered in Singapore with additional presence in Taiwan, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines and Australia. The company is part of Oslo-listed consultancy group ABL Group ASA.
What does the Sinotech–Longitude collaboration mean for offshore wind in Taiwan?
Discover how this strategic partnership will deliver fresh value to offshore wind development, design, and construction—both in Taiwan and across the Asia Pacific region.
📍 Meet the team at Energy Taiwan 2025, exhibiting at the ABL Group Stand N0601, and learn more about what this collaboration means for the future of marine operations and offshore wind engineering.