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FORBES: OFFSHORE WIND PLANS WILL DRIVE UP ELECTRICITY PRICES AND REQUIRE ‘MASSIVE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF THE OCEANS’

By Media Coverage, News

February 8, 2021 — The regatta for setting the loftiest targets for offshore wind energy development has set sail.

Today, South Korea announced plans for 8.2 gigawatts of offshore wind. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson recently called for 40 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity to be built in UK waters by 2030. If achieved, it would be one of the biggest British maritime deployments since the Battle of Trafalgar. Meanwhile, the European Union has targeted some than 300 gigawatts of offshore capacity by 2050.

Joe Biden’s climate advisors are calling for the immediate approval of a slew of pending offshore wind projects. In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo is calling for 9 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity to be built by 2035. Other East Coast governors are also floating multi-gigawatt offshore plans. In all, according to a report issued by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management last June “approximately 22 gigawatts of Atlantic offshore wind development are reasonably foreseeable along the East Coast.”

Here’s some advice: Take all of these offshore plans with a large grain of sea salt.

One of the leases will put dozens of wind turbines smack on top of one of the best scallop and squid fisheries on the Eastern Seaboard. Numerous groups, including the Fisheries Survival Fund, Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, as well as the Bonackers, a small group of fisherman whose roots on Long Island go back centuries, are adamantly opposed to the wind projects slated for the region. On Friday morning, Bonnie Brady, the executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, and a board member of the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, told me that the long-term environmental impact of the proposed projects isn’t well understood. “We know these giant machines change wind patterns and they could change marine migration patterns. Let’s do the science before we destroy the ocean and our ocean food supply.”

Read the full story at Forbes

WBAP: Biden White House to Restart Permitting Major Offshore Wind Project

By Media Coverage, News

February 4, 2021 — The Biden administration said Wednesday it would restart permitting for the first major U.S. offshore wind farm, reversing a Trump administration decision that canceled the process late last year.

The U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) said in a statement it would resume an environmental review of the Vineyard Wind project as part of the administration’s broad plan to speed renewable energy development on federal lands and waters.

“BOEM is committed to conducting a robust and timely review of the proposed project,” Director Amanda Lefton said in the statement.

In December, Vineyard Wind requested a pause in the federal permitting process while it determined whether changes to its design were necessary because of a switch in turbine manufacturers, prompting BOEM to terminate its entire review.

Former President Donald Trump had promised to support the nascent U.S. industry as part of his energy dominance agenda, but the permitting of Vineyard Wind was delayed repeatedly in part due to concerns its turbines would interfere with commercial fishing.

Vineyard Wind is a joint venture between Avangrid Inc., a unit of Spain’s Iberdrola, and Denmark’s Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners. The project is 15 miles (24 km) off the coast of Massachusetts. Once constructed, it is expected to provide power to more than 400,000 Massachusetts homes.

“We’re very pleased,” Vineyard Wind said in a statement. “We look forward to working with the agency as we launch an industry that will create thousands of good paying jobs while also taking meaningful steps to reduce the impact of climate change.”

The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, a fishing industry group, said it hoped the resumption of the permitting process would provide new opportunities for the public to weigh in on the project.

Read the full story here

VINEYARD GAZETTE: Vineyard Wind Federal Review Is Back on Again

By News

February 4, 2021 — The Biden administration announced on Wednesday that it would heed Vineyard Wind’s plea to resume review of its massive infrastructure project, jump starting the country’s first utility-scale offshore wind-farm after it appeared dead in the water only months earlier.

A press release from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the federal agency responsible for the project’s review, placed offshore wind firmly at the center of President Biden’s green infrastructure agenda on Wednesday.

“In support of the Biden administration’s goal to address climate change and promote offshore renewable energy production, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) announced . . . that it intends to resume the environmental review of Vineyard Wind’s proposed offshore wind project,” the release said.

The decision comes less than two months after Vineyard Wind — a joint energy consortium of Avangird Renewables and Copenhagen Infrastructure Projects — pulled its construction plan and requested BOEM halt review.

A decision in the federal register noted that review had been terminated, signaling that the permitting likely would have to begin from scratch.

Federal review of the project — which calls for an 800-megawatt wind-farm 15 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard — had languished for more than two years.

Then last month after President Biden took office, Vineyard Wind rescinded its prior request to halt review, betting on more favorable treatment under the incoming Department of the Interior.

The political maneuvering now appears to have paid off.

In the release Wednesday, the new BOEM director Amanda Lefton said review would resume promptly and would include development of the long-awaited environmental impact statement — a necessary final step in the permitting process.

“Offshore wind has the potential to help our nation combat climate change, improve resilience through reliable power, and spur economic development to create good-paying jobs,” Ms. Lefton said. “BOEM is committed to conducting a robust and timely review of the proposed project.”

Ms. Lefton, a former first assistant secretary in the New York state office of Energy and the Environment under Gov. Andrew Cuomo who previously worked as an executive with The Nature Conservancy, was tapped by President Biden to head BOEM on Tuesday, one day prior to the announcement. The appointment did not need U.S. Senate confirmation.

A spokesman for Vineyard Wind hailed the decision in an emailed statement to the Gazette.

“We look forward to working with the agency as we launch an industry that will create thousands of good paying jobs while also taking meaningful steps to reduce the impacts of climate change,” the statement said in part.

Not all stakeholders were as excited about the move. The project has faced considerable local backlash from independent fishermen who have raised concerns about its impact on prime fishing grounds south of the Island.

A spokesman for the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, a fishermen’s advocacy group, questioned the review process and called for reopening public comment.

“RODA reaffirms our concerns about the flawed process for offshore wind leasing and development in U.S. waters, and hopes BOEM will capitalize on this opportunity to improve public engagement,” a statement from the group said. “Given the complexity of the leasing process, the fact that the public was informed that the review had been terminated, and renewable power goals have increased since the initiation of the review, the re-initiation merits additional opportunities for public comment.”

Vineyard Wind hopes to reach financial close by the second half of 2021, and be online by 2023, a spokesman said.

Other offshore wind projects, including the neighboring Mayflower Wind development, are set to follow closely on Vineyard Wind’s heels, as a once-niche offshore wind industry continues to proliferate.

Read the full story here

SAVING SEAFOOD: RODA Statement on Considerations For The Biden Administration From The Fishing Industry and Coastal Communities

By News, Press Releases

January 29, 2021 — The following was released by the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance:

The United States commercial fishing industry is united around the common goals of protecting our traditional fishing communities, maintaining domestic food security, and leading with evidence-based decision making during an era of rapidly changing ocean use. We are encouraged by the new Administration’s commitment to inclusivity and environmental science. We look forward to improving partnerships between lawmakers, policymakers, and fisheries experts to protect and promote this low-environmental impact protein source, which leads the world in sustainability through the rigorous fisheries management and conservation requirements of the Magnuson Stevens Act.

It is imperative that our elected officials support and adopt policies to minimize and mitigate the effects of climate change; the strategies to do so must equally address the pressing issues of food production, ecosystem health, and preserving cultural heritage. As evidenced by his Agency nominations and recent Executive Order on “Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad,” we are encouraged that the President is taking a measured approach. We applaud leadership and processes that underscore the value of science-based collaboration with members of small communities who are most impacted by natural resource management decisions.

Offshore Renewable Energy Development

The Administration has made clear its commitment to address climate change, which is a matter of critical importance to seafood harvesters adapting to the effects of ecosystem changes every day. The rapid advancement of large offshore wind energy facilities to meet climate goals places our nation at the dawn of a new era of ocean industrialization. While mitigating carbon emissions is urgent and necessary, so is protecting and prioritizing domestic sourcing of sustainable, affordable, and healthy protein. This necessitates evaluating the most efficient means of reducing atmospheric carbon while minimizing impacts to biodiversity and the economy.

Fishing communities stand ready and willing to incorporate their unique expertise in the country’s transition to renewable energy but there must be meaningful ways for them to do so. Three key topics must be addressed to ensure responsible planning for the unprecedented demands that are anticipated to be placed on our oceans.

1. Improving regional research efforts and scientific understanding of offshore infrastructure projects

Development of the Outer Continental Shelf should only be done in a purposeful planned manner utilizing the best available science. Our scientific understanding of impacts from offshore wind energy development is improving, but there is far more unknown about how development will alter the physical, biological, economic and social dimensions of the marine environment.

Evidence-based planning is necessary to understand and minimize impacts, and currently that does not exist for the proposed scale of development to proceed responsibly. For commercial fishermen, it is extremely worrisome to see the push for a new industry that jeopardizes a sustainable and historic one without rigorous scientific due diligence. Such diligence must apply to transparent information about the environmental and economic effects associated with the entire offshore renewable energy supply chain, from mining rare earth minerals for battery components to turbine production to maritime traffic to decommissioning.

Currently, there is no balancing of priorities in offshore renewable energy permitting decisions. Promises to achieve production targets for offshore wind energy based solely on climate goals will significantly impact other public needs such as food production, tourism, and national security. Such targets, if adopted, must be accompanied by a comprehensive roadmap for evaluating tradeoffs and should not be pursued before the creation of balanced multi-use ocean plans. These must include funding for environmental research and compensatory mitigation for impacted sectors.

2. Enhanced interstate coordination and a clear delineation of authorities within federal agencies

Some of the biggest challenges around offshore renewable energy development are due to a lack of consistency in the leasing and planning processes, nonexistent or inconsistent engagement opportunities, and poor integration between planning and permitting authorities.

Regional issues associated with environmental and fisheries impacts require appropriate federal oversight. The current approach results in widespread duplication of efforts, inconsistency and inequity, misplaced interstate competition, and overall unpredictability. To help address the lack of coordination of regional research, RODA co-founded the Responsible Offshore Science Alliance with federal and state entities, offshore wind energy developers, and expert fisheries scientists to serve as a trusted regional coordinating entity. The Administration should reward the collaboration on this innovative public-private partnership and utilize it as a resource for improved coordination.

Responsibilities for the various federal agencies involved is often unclear. A clarification of the roles for these entities is urgently needed and regulatory authority should be returned to agencies with most expertise in the relevant aspects of environmental review.

We look forward to an incoming Commerce Secretary who can bring her expertise and knowledge of coordinating numerous federal, state and local agencies, as well as community members and regional partners together through her experience with the Block Island Wind Farm. As governor, Ms. Raimondo witnessed first hand the time and dedication required for effective collaboration and the complex links of offshore wind energy with the U.S. economy.

3. Facilitation of industry to industry cooperation

As users who will inevitably share the ocean space, regulations, and potential workforce, it is paramount that industry to industry cooperation improves between offshore wind energy development and fishing. Currently this is very difficult to achieve and would benefit from regulatory incentives or direct federal involvement.

RODA has worked to bring industries together through its Joint Industry Task Force and fishing industry leaders are committed to direct engagement when assured those efforts can bear fruit. Small collaborative projects and communication have added value to the process, but not enough resources have been committed to truly catalyze the industries working together in a meaningful way. Absent resources and in a regulatory atmosphere that strongly favors one party, progress is difficult. To be effective, support must be directed to fisheries-driven efforts, not just wind-organized ones. Similarly, some wind developers have expended far more effort than others to work with affected communities in good faith. Incentives to do so must be greatly expanded.

“30×30”

The Presidential Memorandum on scientific integrity must extend to implementation of science-based recommendations for conservation and environmental protection. We are encouraged by the Administration’s commitment to collect input from stakeholders in the “30×30” provisions included in the Executive Order on climate change, which implements a goal of conserving at least 30% of U.S. waters by 2030. We echo the concern expressed by fishing communities and scientists across the country that arbitrary closures, or targets for the total area of closures, based on political negotiations rather than science could have greater negative impacts to ocean conservation than no closures at all.

For conservation measures to be beneficial, they must be carefully designed for specific outcomes such as enhancing ecosystem production, protecting sensitive habitat, or preserving fish spawning activity. The public and transparent fishery management council process is the appropriate way to ensure the best available science determines such design.  We must also be mindful that for a vast majority of Americans, the only access they have to the marine resources in U.S. oceans is a direct result of the U.S. fishing industry.  The Executive Order clearly states environmental and economic justice are important considerations in developing programs and policies. Reducing our abilities to provide U.S. seafood to disadvantaged communities would not further environmental and economic justice.

Support for the Buy American Initiative

The Biden Administration should champion the U.S. commercial fishing industry, which complies with a multitude of regulations to provide renewable protein to Americans across the country. U.S. fisheries are among the most sustainable around the world and constitute one of the lowest-carbon methods of food production. Too often we hear public misconceptions that wild harvest fisheries are on the verge of extinction or utilize destructive practices, but that is not true for U.S. based fisheries. Domestic fisheries are the most strictly regulated in the world and have rebounded extraordinarily from overfishing decades ago; failing to recognize their success only pushes consumers toward seafood from other markets with much looser environmental oversight. The coastal communities across the nation that support our fishing heritage must be protected and celebrated.

In light of the Covid-19 pandemic and staggering unemployment rates, efforts to promote jobs should be maximized across all maritime sectors and ensure that any new coastal uses benefit the U.S. economy and Americans. RODA calls on the Biden administration to work with fishing companies and crews, offshore wind supply chains, unions, and workforce development programs to create robust mechanisms that create and maintain jobs across all maritime trades.

Complementary to this, offshore wind energy development should be the poster industry for the President’s “Buy American” initiative. Current infrastructure in the U.S. does not support the manufacturing or installation of offshore wind turbine components and thus energy development companies are poised to purchase from foreign countries. For example, GE Renewable Energy, a main supplier of wind turbines and turbine parts, recently opened a new offshore wind and development center in China. The Administration should support American labor by requiring turbines, monopiles and blades be manufactured here in the U.S., ensuring that they meet our world-class environmental standards.

As small business owners reliant upon a healthy U.S. environment, our members look forward to working with the President’s appointments for the Secretaries of Commerce, Interior, and Labor. Their experience working with small communities, including coastal and fishing communities, will prove vital as we tackle some of the biggest issues facing our nation. We also look forward to working with the entire Administration on protecting and promoting sustainable U.S. seafood. RODA is committed to helping our members stay on the water and will continue to advocate for protecting the important heritage of the fishing industry and coastal communities across the country.

NEWS CENTER MAINE: Promise of offshore wind power promoted by Mills, feared by fisherman

By News

January 29, 2021 — On this brilliant winter day, you could stand on the rocks at Pemaquid Point with a clear view of Monhegan Island in the distance, and feel the wind coming off the water. There is often wind over the ocean, and that’s why there is such interest in developing offshore wind turbines in the Gulf of Maine.

Offshore wind power is a signature goal of the Mills administration and is seen as one of the ways to fight climate change by generating electricity without carbon emissions.

“Offshore wind is a really significant opportunity for the state of Maine, for our energy future and economy,” Dan Burgess, Director of the Governor’s Energy Office, said.

But the image of huge, floating wind turbines has many in Maine’s fishing industry very worried. Among them is lobsterman Gerry Cushman of Port Clyde, a leader in both the Maine Lobstermen’s Association and the Maine Coast Fishermen’s Association.

“And our message to the Governor is we hope you get behind the fishermen and help us fight this. We have no option but to fight this. We have to fight this not just for now but for our kids.”

It is a sharp contrast between those who see opportunity and those who feel threatened, and the Mills dministration is trying to navigate those turbulent waters.

A coalition of fishing groups called the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance said they also support clean energy development to fight climate change but have deep concerns about offshore wind. The groups did say it will keep talking with the Governor’s office about the plan.

Read the full story here

MAINEBIZ: Gov. Mills wants to freeze near-shore wind development in response to fishing concerns

By News

January 25, 2021 — As commercial fishermen express concern about the impact of proposed offshore wind energy development in the Gulf of Maine, Gov. Janet Mills on Friday tried to calm the waters.

Mills said in a letter to fishermen she will ask the Legislature to create a 10-year moratorium on new wind projects within 3 miles of shoreline, a state-managed band of ocean that supports most of Maine’s lobster fishing as well as much coastal tourism.

But she promised little to allay fears about how a planned array of floating wind turbines might affect fishing and the marine environment farther offshore.

The Governor’s Energy Office is leading the development of up to 12 turbines that would float 20 to 40 miles off Maine’s southern coast and be used for research. In partnership with the University of Maine and two renewable energy companies, the New England Aqua Ventus array would cover up to 16 square miles of ocean grounds leased from the federal government.

While a specific site hasn’t been chosen, the array would likely connect to the state’s power grid at either the Wyman Station generating plant in Yarmouth or the former Maine Yankee plant in Wiscasset, according to a news release Monday.

Meanwhile, a coalition of fishermen recently urged the governor to make “an inclusive planning process” a priority in any offshore wind development. The Maine Lobstermen’s Association, Maine Coast Fishermen’s Association, and a number of Maine-based fishermen are members of the members of the coalition, dubbed Responsible Offshore Development Alliance and headquartered in Washington, D.C.

Fishermen also spoke out in opposition to the plan during a series of December webinars hosted by the Governor’s Energy Office and the Maine Department of Marine Resources. The sessions were designed to gather input from the fishing community about siting and the array’s potential impact on the industry.

Read the full story here

ENERGY CENTRAL: As Commerce Secretary, Raimondo to play key role in offshore wind

By News

January 19, 2021 — In the selection of Gina Raimondo as the next U.S. Secretary of Commerce, the offshore wind industry would get a champion in Washington.

What influence she could bring to bear for the emerging energy sector remains to be seen, but if confirmed to her new position in the Biden cabinet, Raimondo would oversee federal fisheries regulators who have raised some of the concerns about potential negative impacts of erecting what could be many hundreds of wind turbines in the ocean waters off southern New England.

It’s those concerns that have played a major role in delaying the approval process for the first set of large wind farms proposed in the nation.

More: Biden picks Raimondo as commerce secretary

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, an arm of the Department of the Interior, has permitting authority over the multibillion-dollar projects, which are all planned for the Atlantic Ocean waters off Rhode Island and Massachusetts. But both federal fisheries management and coastal zone management are under the aegis of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which is part of the Department of Commerce.

More: RI’s wind-farm plan poised to advance in ’21

“Other than BOEM, NOAA is probably the most important permitting agency for offshore wind,” said Jeffrey Grybowski, CEO of Maryland-based U.S. Wind who, as the former head of Deepwater Wind, has led the development of the industry in the United States.

The expectation to get things moving for the industry will be high. President-elect Joseph R. Biden has targeted a carbon-free power sector by 2035. For the New England and mid-Atlantic states, offshore wind offers the most promising renewable energy option of scale.

In Raimondo’s six years as Rhode Island governor, the Ocean State has not only become home to the first offshore wind farm in the country — an array of five turbines off Block Island completed in 2016 — but the state also signed up for a second project that would be more than 10 times bigger when built, and then, this past fall, requested proposals for yet another.

If Raimondo’s plans come to fruition, offshore wind would be able to power every home in Rhode Island and meet nearly two-thirds of the state’s total electric needs.

“She’s done a lot to kickstart the industry in Rhode Island,” said David Hardy, CEO of North American operations for Orsted, the largest offshore wind developer in the world. “We hope that she’ll bring that leadership style to Washington.”

Those in the fishing industry are also hopeful. The Block Island Wind Farm was built only after a rigorous planning process that aimed to minimize conflicts with fishermen and other ocean users. Commercial fishermen want to make sure that any development going forward fully accounts for their needs.

“I think it’s fantastic to have someone that does have experience with offshore wind and knows the extent of the conflicts,” said Annie Hawkins, executive director of the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, a group representing fishing interests in the development of offshore wind. “She understands coastal communities and their concerns. I think there is a real opportunity here.”

Due in varying degrees to the success of the Block Island Wind Farm, the relatively shallow waters and strong winds off southern New England, and the proximity to population centers with big electric demands, a swath of ocean stretching southeast from a point between Martha’s Vineyard and Block Island has become ground zero for the offshore wind business in the United States.

After Providence-based startup Deepwater Wind tested the waters with its 30-megawatt project near Block Island, corporate titans from Europe, where the global industry started three decades ago, came in with bigger proposals. Danish company Orsted bought Deepwater and with utility Eversource is now pursuing, among other plans, the 400-megawatt Revolution Wind proposal that the Raimondo administration selected in 2018 to supply power to Rhode Island.

But it was another company, Vineyard Wind — which is backed by Danish and Spanish interests — that submitted the first application to the federal government for a project of real size, an 800-megawatt wind farm that would supply power to Massachusetts.

It was also the Vineyard Wind project that set off the ongoing dispute with the fishing industry. Fishermen complained that the proposed spacing of the project’s turbines was too tight and would make it dangerous to navigate through the wind farm. They also criticized the orientation of the rows of turbines saying that it would make it difficult to trawl or set fixed gear within the project.

Fishermen in Rhode Island, home to one of the largest fishing ports in New England, were among the first to air grievances, saying that they would effectively lose access to grounds rich in squid, Jonah crab and lobster.

Their concerns were soon taken up by fisheries managers. In comments submitted to BOEM on the environmental review for Vineyard Wind, Michael Pentony, regional administrator for NOAA Fisheries, questioned whether the full impacts of offshore wind on the fishing industry were being factored into the permitting process. In his March 2019 letter, he pointed in particular to the specter of fishermen being displaced from fishing grounds.

“…sometimes fisheries occur where they do because of the confluence of biooceanographic conditions that make fishing possible (e.g., depth, temperature, and habitat type leading to an aggregation of sufficient density to fish effectively),” he wrote. “In such cases, moving is simply not an option because the fish would not be there.”

That August, BOEM shocked the industry when it ordered a supplemental environmental review for Vineyard Wind, on the basis that a new assessment was needed to look at the cumulative impact on the environment and fishing of all the wind farms being proposed.

A final decision on the project was expected that summer. Instead, Vineyard Wind would have to wait. So too would all the other developers in line behind it.

Vineyard Wind came before Rhode Island coastal regulators in 2018 requesting certification that their project was consistent with state policies. It’s one of many state and local approvals the project needs on top of a federal sign-off.

After months of often rancorous negotiations with fishing representatives, Vineyard Wind offered to create two funds totaling $16.7 million to compensate fishermen for lost access. The state Coastal Resources Management Council awarded certification for the project in February 2019.

The Raimondo administration was deeply involved in the talks, not only through fishing experts with the state Department of Environmental Management but also through members of the governor’s own staff.

There was suspicion among fishermen that the governor — a believer in the broader economic benefits and jobs-creation impacts of offshore wind — was favoring Vineyard Wind in the discussions and rumors that her office was working out an alternative pact with the developer. A spokesman for the governor said at the time that her staff was talking to Vineyard Wind only about a separate economic development package.

At one meeting before the project won approval, Chris Brown, a Point Judith fisherman who was then president of the Seafood Harvesters of America, described his perceived role of the governor in the talks as a “usurpation.”

This week, when asked to comment on Raimondo’s selection as Commerce Secretary, Lanny Dellinger, chairman of the fishing board that advises the Rhode Island coastal council, offered a written statement:

“If Governor Raimondo becomes Commerce Secretary, the Fishermen’s Advisory Board is hopeful that she will be mindful of the impacts from offshore wind projects on the Rhode Island fishing industry. The fishing industry really bears the burden of these projects, including major impacts identified by BOEM such as navigation safety, quotas, gear conflicts, and displacement of fishing effort. NOAA can work cooperatively with the state and fishing industry to protect both the fishers and the resource. We look to the Commerce Secretary to be fair, and to be protective of both.”

Grover Fugate, the executive director of the coastal council during the Vineyard Wind talks, said that Raimondo would have an advantage taking over Commerce in that she’s familiar with fishing issues and the conflicts with offshore wind.

“One of the key responsibilities she has is the fisheries issue,” said Fugate who retired last year and is now a consultant on coastal issues. “Maybe it will be a new day and a new approach and hopefully it is. But she’s going to have to find her way.”

It’s been nearly three years since the dispute erupted between fishermen and Vineyard Wind. The company and other developers have agreed to spacing of one nautical mile between their turbines, but fishermen are still advocating for transit lanes through the wind farms that would be four nautical miles wide.

The draft supplemental environmental review for Vineyard Wind was released last summer and it described the possibility of “major” effects on fisheries from offshore wind. A decision on the company’s application was expected by Dec. 18, but as the deadline neared BOEM pushed off a final ruling until sometime before Jan. 15. On Dec. 1, Vineyard Wind announced that it was temporarily withdrawing its application.

The stated reason was to conduct a technical evaluation of using larger turbines than those originally planned, but Hawkins, of the fishing group working on offshore wind issues, believes that worries about the fisheries issues and a potentially negative decision from Trump’s Interior Department came into play.

Vineyard Wind, in response, referred back to a previous statement, saying the project continues to progress and that the permitting process can “promptly restart.”

When things start moving again for the developers, Hawkins wants to see more coordination with fishermen — something along the lines of what Rhode Island did years ago before the first turbines went up off Block Island.

U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a supporter of offshore wind and a champion of the ocean environment who has been vocal about his belief in balancing the interests of fishermen, called for something similar.

“I hope a Secretary Raimondo will have a role in applying the Rhode Island model to the offshore wind permitting process nationwide,” the Rhode Island Democrat said in an email.

Read the full story here

WBUR: Offshore Wind Backers Hope Vineyard Wind Permitting Woes Will End Under Biden

By News

January 19, 2021 — For Massachusetts to meet its 2050 climate change emission goal, the state is going to have to green the grid, replacing fossil fuel power plants with clean renewable energy sources. To do this, the commonwealth is banking on offshore wind.

“Offshore wind is the linchpin of Massachusetts clean energy strategy and critical to our success,” said State Sen. Michael Barrett, head of the committee that oversees utilities and energy.

By 2030, developers of offshore wind hope to install over 2,000 turbines in the seas from Massachusetts to North Carolina.

The Vineyard Wind project off Martha’s Vineyard was expected to be the nation’s first utility-size wind farm at sea, but navigating the politics and pioneering the uncertain regulatory process has proven more difficult than expected.

Barrett said he blames the Trump administration for stalling the federal environmental permitting process.

“Boy, I feel badly for the private sector developers here,” he said. “They did come to Massachusetts first. Massachusetts beckoned them first, so it’s those private sector firms … they really have been dealt a delay time and again by the Trump people.”

Just days before Vineyard Wind expected to get final approval, federal regulators decided to delay the project for 18 months while a cumulative environmental impact of all proposed offshore projects was conducted.

The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance (RODA), which represents the commercial fishing industry, had wanted to slow the permitting process down.

“You know, it’s really, really hard to evaluate tradeoffs between something really important like fishing, and something really important like climate change mitigation,” said Annie Hawkins, the group’s executive director. “Both of these things need to be addressed together — and they can be — but right now the way we look at it, it’s not happening that way.”

Read the full story here

MAINEBIZ: Fishermen say Mills’ offshore wind plan is short-circuiting input process

By News

January 14, 2021 — A coalition of fishing communities last week sent a letter to Gov. Janet Mills expressing concern about proposed offshore wind energy development in the Gulf of Maine.

The coalition, called Responsible Offshore Development Alliance and based in Washington, D.C., asked the Mills administration to prioritize “an inclusive planning process and research program over the rapid implementation of commercial-scale OSW [offshore wind] facilities.”

The Maine Lobstermen’s Association, Maine Coast Fishermen’s Association, and a number of Maine-based fishermen are members of the alliance.

The Governor’s Energy Office is leading the development of a research array of up to 12 turbines covering up to 16 square miles somewhere along the southern half of Maine’s coast. The location and size and number of the turbines haven’t been determined yet.

In a virtual information meeting last month, GEO Deputy Director Celina Cunningham said the state is seeking input from fishermen to determine locations hat would have minimal conflict with known fishing grounds.

But Responsible Offshore Development Alliance Executive Director Annie Hawkins wrote the group is “troubled that the timeline for the state’s proposed research array allows for neither adequate planning nor engagement with the fishing industry.”

She added that the fishing industry is willing to work with the state on the research array “to consider outcomes that may minimize impacts to fishing practices and provide much-needed socioeconomic and environmental data. However, this is only possible if we have a reasonable timeline and planning process to complete this work.”

Given the significant fishing occurring in the gulf and the relative lack of fine-scale data regarding fishing activity there, “the risk of unreasonable interference would greatly increase if a project is rushed and does not include close coordination with fishing experts,” she wrote.

The state’s timeline includes submitting an application for the research array to the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management this winter or early spring.

The bureau is responsible for leasing sites in federal waters, which begin 3 miles from the coast.

But Hawkins said the timeline is too short to collect the fishing activity data needed to minimize impacts. The problem is exacerbated by the pandemic, she wrote.

“Despite the assurance that your office will work with us to ‘ensure that we organize a stakeholder process that is mindful of immediate health and business impacts from COVID-19,’ we have received no roadmap for how the state intends to develop partnerships with the industry that are cognizant of the significant current limitations on meetings, unusual time demands, and economic demands fishermen currently face as essential workers providing food to the nation,” she wrote.

The alliance also called for the research array to be considered as part of a larger planning effort around future offshore wind development, rather than as a stand-alone project.

“This approach does not allow the fishing industry to understand how the research array might fit into a larger OSW development or how to minimize the cumulative impacts of multiple such developments,” Hawkins wrote.

Over two dozen Swan’s Island fishermen signed onto a Facebook push to gather names to add to the letter. The letter was also available through the Maine Coast Fishermen’s Association website, which told fishermen they could sign onto the letter by contacting the association.

In November, the Maine Lobstermen’s Association wrote to Mills to express its concern about proposed offshore wind development in the Gulf of Maine and the potential that it will negatively impact Maine’s fishing industry

“Offshore wind technologies are evolving rapidly and because of that, there are significant deficiencies in our understanding of the environmental impacts as well as the displacement of fishermen that may result from these projects,” the associate’s executive director, Patrice McCarron, wrote.

“The MLA believes strongly in the need for a robust stakeholder process. To this end, the MLA and many other Maine-based fishing industry associations are working proactively on the offshore wind issue through the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance.”

WBUR: Maine Wants To Lead In Offshore Wind, But Fishermen Say State Is Moving Too Fast

By News

January 8, 2021 — Fishermen say that Maine Gov. Janet Mills’ plan for a state-led offshore wind project is being rushed. And now news that a developer is considering a new commercial-scale wind project off the coast is adding to their fears.

In late November, the Mills administration announced that the state would seek a federal lease for up to 12 floating wind turbines off southern Maine that could produce enough energy for more than 70,000 homes.

Annie Hawkins, executive director of a fishing-industry trade group called the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, says that could considerably strengthen fishermen’s hand.

“It’s certainly much stronger than it was. And I think a pure reading of the memo would say that fishermen have priority,” she says, “and that would put fishing operations in a really protected spot.”

Hawkins says it’s unknown whether the Biden administration will enforce that opinion. Burgess says the administration is studying the opinion’s potential ramifications. He adds that the next step in determining a lease site for a research array off Maine, a scoping session, will take place this month, although it has yet to be scheduled.

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