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First turbines in federal waters? Va.โ€™s on the way

October 10, 2018 โ€” Dominion Energy Inc.โ€™s request to build a modestly sized โ€” though less modestly priced โ€” wind farm goes before regulators today, as evidentiary hearings begin on the two-turbine, $300 million Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project.

If all goes as planned, the project would come online in 2020, becoming the nationโ€™s second offshore wind farm and the first to go up in federal waters.

Sited 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach, the turbines would add 12 megawatts of capacity to the stateโ€™s grid. But Dominion, along with its industry allies and Virginia officials, see the demonstration as a steppingstone to the stateโ€™s new goal of developing 2 gigawatts by 2028.

โ€œ[T]he project needs to be built and studied to determine how the technology works and performs in the Atlantic Ocean 27 miles off the coast, and in potential hurricane force winds,โ€ said David Botkins, a spokesman for the company, which is partnering with Denmark-based ร˜rsted Energy A/S on the project.

Andy Geissbuehler, advisory director at renewable consultancy BVG Associates, agreed.

โ€œOne of the basics in launching the offshore wind industry in the U.S. is transferring the experience from Europe,โ€ he said. โ€œBut there are limitations to how much of that experience can be transferred.โ€

Signed, sealed, delivered?

This weekโ€™s hearings at the State Corporation Commission come after a preliminary session Thursday, when lawyers for environmentalists, Dominion and the attorney generalโ€™s office attempted to reassure the SCCโ€™s three commissioners that they still enjoyed some semblance of authority over the project.

Read the full story at E&E News

 

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