Everwind Review: Scaling Renewable Energy in Maritime

EverWind’s pitch sits at the intersection of ports and energy. They are building a clean fuels platform in Atlantic Canada anchored by a deepwater terminal at Point Tupper, aiming to produce green hydrogen and green ammonia that can be shipped to market. For maritime stakeholders, the interesting part is the infrastructure story: deepwater access, industrial waterfront, and an export-oriented fuels project tied to new renewable power.
- Operational deepwater terminal is the anchor asset: EverWind frames Point Tupper as an operational deepwater terminal base for a broader clean fuels export hub, with existing marine infrastructure positioned for large-vessel calls and export handling.
- Phase 1 has a defined regulatory footprint: Nova Scotia’s Environmental Assessment registry shows Phase 1 of the Point Tupper Green Hydrogen/Ammonia Project was formally registered for EA review, giving stakeholders a public reference point for scope, location, and baseline project description.
- Export-side hardware is explicitly in scope: Transport Canada funding announcements describe marine and shore-side development tied to export readiness, including a green ammonia loading arm and a pipeline linking the production facility to the transport terminal.
- Marine operations capacity is being built out: The same federal release describes plans to buy three tugboats and improve the dock to support safe ship movements and loading operations, which is a practical detail for anyone tracking berth interface, loading cadence, and terminal reliability.
- Power enablement has an EA decision on record: Nova Scotia’s EA registry includes an approval decision (with conditions) for EverWind’s Strait Crossing Transmission Line, a key enabling link for power delivery tied to the broader green fuels buildout.
- Renewable supply pipeline is advancing in parallel: EverWind’s Guysborough wind portfolio is positioned as Phase 2 of its renewable buildout to power the Point Tupper facility, and EverWind has publicly stated the Setapuktuk Wind Project received EA approval in November 2025 with construction-related activity anticipated in 2026.
- Early-stage engineering and technology selection is documented: EverWind and Nel have publicly described Nel’s role in the FEED study context, including a potential ~200 MW electrolyser facility for the Point Tupper project pathway.
- European demand signal was publicly announced: Uniper announced an MoU (2022) with EverWind around negotiating green ammonia supply, providing an external marker of market interest (note that MoUs are not the same as final offtake contracts, and timelines can shift).
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Federal funding tied to ship-loading equipment Transport Canada • Oct 2024Transport Canada announced up to $22.5 million for EverWind under the Green Shipping Corridor Program, explicitly listing a green ammonia loading arm, a pipeline to the terminal, and three tugboats plus dock improvements for safer ship movement and loading. Source: Government of Canada news release .
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Phase 1 environmental assessment approved with conditions Nova Scotia EA • Feb 2023Nova Scotia’s Environmental Assessment registry lists the Point Tupper Green Hydrogen/Ammonia Project (Phase 1) as approved with conditions, with the description pointing to a hydrogen and ammonia production facility near the Strait of Canso and an export intent for green ammonia. Page: EverWind Point Tupper Green Hydrogen/Ammonia Project – Phase 1 .
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2,000 MW transmission link cleared through EA review Nova Scotia EA • Apr 2025Nova Scotia’s EA page for the Strait Crossing Transmission Line describes a 345 kV overhead line intended to move wind-generated electricity toward the Point Tupper hydrogen and ammonia facility, with an April 25, 2025 minister’s decision approving the undertaking subject to conditions. Page: EverWind Strait Crossing Transmission Line Project .
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Setapuktuk Wind Project EA approval with stated power linkage Province of Nova Scotia • Nov 2025A Nova Scotia news release states the Setapuktuk Wind Project (432 MW, 54 turbines) received environmental assessment approval and that the electricity will be used by EverWind to power its green hydrogen and ammonia facility in Point Tupper. Release: Wind Project Receives Environmental Assessment Approval .
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German offtake MoU announcements (demand-side signal) GlobeNewswire / Reuters • Aug 2022EverWind announced an MoU with Uniper to work toward a green ammonia offtake (stated intent to negotiate a binding agreement for 500,000 tpa). Reuters also reported Uniper and E.ON planned to work on deals totaling 1 million tonnes per year of green ammonia from EverWind. Sources: EverWind release via GlobeNewswire and Reuters report .
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Electrolyser FEED participation named by a primary supplier Nel ASA • May 2022Nel ASA stated EverWind selected Nel to participate in a FEED study as technology provider for a potential 200 MW electrolyser facility tied to the Point Tupper project concept. Source: Nel press release .
| Category | Value |
|---|---|
| Effective cargo per voyage | 0 |
| Estimated berth calls/year | 0 |
| Estimated berth calls/month | 0 |
| Planning note | — |
EverWind Fuels is positioning Point Tupper as a terminal-led clean fuels export project, with public signals ranging from environmental assessment decisions to announced infrastructure funding and named counterpart interest. For maritime stakeholders, the practical takeaway is that the project is being built around ship-loading reality, not just production targets, which makes it easier to track progress and evaluate how it could fit into future supply chains. The remaining uncertainty is typical for projects at this stage: timelines, final offtake terms, product specifications, and the operating procedures that ultimately determine how reliably cargo can move.
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