Lawsuits buffet US offshore wind projects, seeking to end or delay them
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[September 19, 2024] By
WAYNE PARRY
BRIGANTINE, N.J. (AP) — Opponents of offshore wind around
the U.S. are pelting projects with lawsuits seeking to cancel them or
tie them up for years in costly litigation.
The court cases represent another hurdle the nascent industry must
overcome, particularly along the East Coast where opposition to offshore
wind farms is vocal and well-organized.
They add another pressure point for an industry already struggling with
escalating prices, shaky supply chains, and a handful of highly
publicized turbine failures that opponents are seizing on as proof that
the structures are unreliable and unsafe, something the industry denies.
There are 13 cases pending in federal courts targeting offshore wind
projects, according to the American Clean Power Association, an offshore
wind trade group. An undetermined number of additional lawsuits are
active in state courts, they said.
Robin Shaffer is president of Protect Our Coast NJ, a citizens group
that has filed numerous lawsuits in New Jersey against two offshore
projects currently or previously proposed.
Shaffer said his group was at least partly responsible for scuttling two
New Jersey wind farms proposed by Orsted that the Danish wind giant
scrapped last October, saying they were no longer financially workable.
“An ancillary benefit of our legal strategy is to give pause or doubt in
the minds of investors in the big corporations that are undertaking
these projects,” he said. “Last year, we saw Orsted leave its commitment
to build Ocean Wind off the southern New Jersey coast amidst the
uncertainty of two lawsuits we filed, as well as another filed by Cape
May County.”
Opponents cite altered views of the horizon from wind turbines and
concerns about what the structures might do to marine life. They also
cite rising projected prices for electricity generated from the wind
farms, and point to recent turbine collapses off Martha's Vineyard in
Massachusetts and at Doggers Bank off the English coast as proof the
technology is risky.
Supporters say offshore wind is necessary to combat climate change,
which they call the principal threat to the ocean and its inhabitants.
“Offshore wind projects undergo rigorous environmental reviews and
permitting processes, in addition to a lengthy public comment period,"
said Jason Ryan, a spokesman for the Clean Power Association. "The
current slate of U.S. offshore wind projects under construction and
development are among the most carefully planned and analyzed
infrastructure projects in U.S. history; we are confident their permits
will withstand legal scrutiny.”
Paulina O'Connor, executive director of the New Jersey Offshore Wind
Alliance, said offshore wind is needed to combat climate change.
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Land-based wind turbines spin in Atlantic City, N.J., on Wednesday,
Sept. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Wayne Parry)
“On the heels of one of the hottest summers on record, it
is disappointing to see another frivolous lawsuit filed by those with
opposing views," she said of the most recent lawsuit.
That action was filed Friday by Save LBI, another New Jersey citizen
group. It claims that Atlantic Shores, the New Jersey project furthest
along its state's approval path, would violate noise ordinances during
pile driving and operation of hundreds of wind turbines. The group says
it has several other lawsuits on the way. Atlantic Shores declined to
comment.
Other litigation in New Jersey challenged Orsted's now-scrapped wind
farm plan, a state tax break the company would have received, and even
the placement of a power cable that would bring electricity from the
project onshore. A group of Jersey Shore towns sued Atlantic Shores, and
fishing and environmental groups sued two federal agencies overseeing
offshore wind projects. They are appealing the dismissal of their suit
after a judge ruled they had no legal standing to sue.
Offshore wind foes in other states are also turning to the courts.
In March, The National Legal and Policy Center, a conservative watchdog
group in Virginia, sued Dominion Energy and the federal government
hoping to block a wind farm off the coast of Virginia Beach. Dominion
called the suit meritless and said it employs multiple layers of
protection for the marine environment.
Last year, a Rhode Island nonprofit known for its seaside mansions sued
the federal government challenging the permitting process for offshore
wind energy projects off Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. The
Preservation Society of Newport County said the presence of hundreds of
wind turbines off the New England coast would ruin ocean views from
several of its historic properties.
Also in Rhode Island, the anti-wind group Green Oceans sued the federal
government in April, saying it illegally gave Orsted permits for its
South Fork Wind and Revolution Wind projects. Orsted declined comment on
the lawsuit but noted that South Fork is fully operational and
Revolution recently installed its first turbine.
On the West Coast, the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and
Siuslaw Indians in Oregon, whose culture reveres the ocean, sued the
federal government Tuesday over plans to hold an offshore wind energy
auction next month.
And in March, fishermen sued California over plans for three floating
wind farms.
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