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There are too many unknowns about offshore wind

September 26, 2024 โ€” Dale Witham of Bremen has been a commercial fisherman for more than 50 years.

The Green New Deal was developed and implemented to address climate change, as well as, create jobs, economic growth and reduce economic inequality. Thomas Friedman of The New York Times wrote in 2007, โ€œIf you have to put a windmill in your yard or some solar panels on your roof, bless your heart. But we will only green the world when we change the very nature of the electricity grid โ€” moving it away from dirty coal or oil to clean coal and renewables.โ€

Maineโ€™s offshore fishing grounds have provided for the people of this state for generations. In 2021, Maineโ€™s commercial fishing value for all species was more than $890 million. The stateโ€™s population was 1.37 million people, equating to $649.18 in generated wealth for every resident.

Read the full article at Bangor Daily News

MASS. REP. CHRIS HENDRICKS: Why I am with Ed

August 19, 2020 โ€” When I endorsed Senator Ed Markey for re-election in August of 2019, I did so mainly because of one reason: his record on climate issues. Today, that list of reasons has grown exponentially as Ed has proven himself a true leader for the SouthCoast.

Since the Reagan administration, Ed has led the effort to bring meaningful policy change to mitigate the effects of our warming planet. His work as a young congressman resulted in reduced greenhouse gas emissions nationwide, directly benefiting middle-class and low-income communities. When President George W. Bush refused to take climate change seriously, it was Ed who pressed the administration to take action. The Speaker of the House at the time referred to Edโ€™s knowledge on climate policy as โ€œdazzlingโ€ and his work resulted in better fuel-economy standards and more electric vehicles.

As the Senate co-sponsor of the Green New Deal, Ed understands that we have a unique opportunity to kick-start an entirely new labor market here in Massachusetts. Edโ€™s vision sees a renewable energy industry that โ€œcreates high-quality union jobs that pay prevailing wages, hires local workers, offers training and advancement opportunities, and guarantees wage and benefit parity for workers affected by the transition.โ€ The SouthCoast is the center hub for renewable energy jobs, more than any other part of the Commonwealth, and Edโ€™s continued leadership in the Senate will allow us to fully realize that.

Read the full story at WBSM

Oceans should have a place in climate โ€˜green new dealโ€™ policies, scientists suggest

May 6, 2020 โ€” The worldโ€™s oceans play a critical role in climate regulation, mitigation and adaptation and should be integrated into comprehensive โ€œgreen new dealโ€ proposals being promoted by elected officials and agency policymakers, a group of ocean scientists suggests in a new paper.

โ€œThe โ€˜green new dealโ€™ has been the headline, but very few have been talking about the oceans in those conversations,โ€ said Steven Dundas, an environmental and resource economist in Oregon State Universityโ€™s College of Agricultural Sciences and the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station in Newport, Oregon.

โ€œWe think itโ€™s important to add a touch of ocean blue to this conversation because the oceans play an important role in efforts to mitigate effects of climate change,โ€ he said. โ€œOur proposed โ€˜teal dealโ€™ is an integrated approach that is more likely to generate cost-effective and equitable solutions to this global threat.โ€

Dundas is one of three senior authors of the paper, which was published recently by the journal Conservation Letters. The other senior authors are Arielle Levine and Rebecca Lewison of San Diego State University. Additional authors include OSUโ€™s Angee Doerr, Ana Spalding and Will White.

Read the full story at PHYS.org

Fishermen get scant mention in โ€˜Blue New Dealโ€™

December 16, 2019 โ€” We here at FishOn are simple folk and we live by some pretty simple rules. Rule No. 1 is why stand when you can sit. Rule No. 2 is that any meeting that lasts more than 15 minutes and involves more than three people generally is a colossal waste of time for everyone.

The same principle, of course, can be applied to the various pledges, promises and plans issued by anyone running for elective office. And that brings us to our own Sen. Elizabeth Warren and her seemingly bottomless capacity, in her quest for the presidency, for issuing plans to cure everything but the common cold.

Warrenโ€™s campaign last week released its most recent plan โ€” a Blue New Deal for Our Oceans โ€” and letโ€™s just say this is not the most fishing-friendly document on the shelf.

The 15-page document touches on many issues. It addresses expanding offshore renewable energy and building climate-ready fisheries. It talks about expanding community-based seafood markets and investing in regenerative ocean farming and building climate-smart ports.

It urges the protection of ocean habitats and the restoration of marine ecosystems. It calls for the end of offshore drilling and makes the case for that old environmental crowd-pleaser, expanding protected marine areas that would be closed to commercial fishing.

And on and on and on. Itโ€™s a Utah lake. About a mile wide and an inch deep.

But nowhere in those thousands of words spread across 15 pages does the plan directly address the plight of the commercial fishing industry and the fishermen who have as much at stake in the blue economy as anyone.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

Warren releases โ€˜Blue New Deal,โ€™ a plan to help ailing oceans

December 10, 2019 โ€” Senator Elizabeth Warren on Tuesday released an addendum to her vision for a Green New Deal: the Blue New Deal.

The new plan seeks to address how climate change is affecting oceans and other waters, while ensuring a vibrant marine economy, she said.

โ€œWhile the ocean is severely threatened, it can also be a major part of the climate solution,โ€ she wrote in a nine-page summary of the plan. โ€œThat is why I believe that a Blue New Deal must be an essential part of any Green New Deal.โ€

โ€œNot being consulted on this isnโ€™t a good start to the relationship,โ€ said Drew Minkiewicz, an attorney for the Fisheries Survival Fund in Washington, D.C., which represents the scallop industry. โ€œWe expected something more well-thought-out from her.โ€

Annie Hawkins, executive director of the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, a coalition of fishing industry associations and companies, said that โ€œany large industrial project in the ocean will have significant impacts to the sustainability of established activities and the marine environment.โ€

โ€œTo me, it seems like it was written by staff, and they did a lot of Googling,โ€ said Robert Vanasse, executive director of Saving Seafood, a Washington-based group that represents commercial fishermen. โ€œItโ€™s disappointing, because we know Senator Warren has a more sophisticated understanding of fisheries.โ€

Read the full story at The Boston Globe

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