Big offshore wind project proposed for New York as other sites are
evaluated in 3 states
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[October 23, 2024] By
WAYNE PARRY
BRIGANTINE, N.J. (AP) — Offshore wind energy projects in New York, New
Jersey and Maryland are moving forward, as federal regulators examine
the proposals and opponents escalate their legal challenges to the work.
A large offshore wind farm is being proposed in the waters off New York
as federal agencies are pressing ahead with reviews of seven other ocean
sites.
Community Offshore Wind, a partnership between Essen, Germany-based RWE
and New York-based National Grid, on Friday proposed a wind farm that
would generate 2.8 gigawatts of electricity, or enough to power 1
million homes.
The company also has an active proposal to build a separate project in
New Jersey off the coast of Long Beach Island.
It says its New York project is the largest offshore wind project ever
proposed to New York regulators, although it did not say approximately
how many wind turbines it might build there.
“New York and New Jersey are both pursuing some of the most ambitious
clean energy goals in the country, and offshore wind will be critical to
each state’s success,” said Dan Sieger, the company's head of
development. He said the project would be built 64 miles (100
kilometers) off the New York coast and 37 miles (60 kilometers) from New
Jersey.
In July, Community Offshore Wind submitted plans to build an offshore
wind facility in New Jersey that could power 500,000 homes.
On Monday, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management released an
environmental review of six offshore wind sites covering nearly a half
million acres (200,000 hectares) in New York and New Jersey, examining
their possible impacts on marine life, shorebirds, air and water quality
and other areas.
It found that offshore wind projects could impact marine mammals and
fish during construction, though they predicted such impacts would be
temporary.
But it also wrote that even with mitigation and monitoring procedures in
place, “development would still result in unavoidable adverse impacts"
including an increased risk of temporary or permanent hearing loss in
whales and other marine mammals, higher risk of death for sea turtles
struck by vessels and birds struck by turbine blades, and alteration of
ocean views from shore.
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Land-based wind turbines spin in Atlantic City, N.J., on Nov. 3,
2023. (AP Photo/Wayne Parry)
The American Clean Power Association
called the environmental review “a vital step" toward getting new
projects approved efficiently.
On Tuesday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
determined that construction of a 32-acre (13-hectare) facility in
New York City where offshore wind towers will be assembled “is
likely to adversely affect, but is not likely to jeopardize” the
continued existence of sea turtles or Atlantic sturgeon in the area.
The Arthur Kill Terminal Project is being planned for the Staten
Island section of New York.
That same day, in a review of a seventh proposed site, the agency
also said a Maryland offshore wind project is not expected to kill
or seriously injure any marine mammal species.
The Maryland Offshore Wind Project could see 114 wind turbines, four
offshore substation platforms and up to four offshore export cable
corridors built about 11.5 miles (18.5 kilometers) off that state's
coast. Two phases, known as MarWin and Momentum Wind, already have
preliminary state approval.
And the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently granted New
Jersey's Atlantic Shores wind farm project a permit under the
federal Clean Air Act. That led one of many vocal opposition groups
to add to its legal challenges to the project.
The grassroots nonprofit Save LBI is appealing the approval, and has
filed notice of its intent to sue the EPA. Bob Stern, the group's
president, said the agency did not adequately consider potential air
quality impacts on the Brigantine National Wilderness Area and the
Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in southern New Jersey.
As of last month, there were 13 cases pending in federal courts
targeting offshore wind projects, according to the American Clean
Power Association. An undetermined number of additional lawsuits are
active in state courts, they said.
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