June 24, 2021 โ Four-decade scallop fisherman and Viking Village fleet owner Jim Gutowski laid out the scope in size of one offshore wind farm turbine as a backdrop to his talk on โThe Impact of Offshore Wind Farms on Our Commercial Fishing Industryโ at the June 19 meeting of the Barnegat Light Taxpayerโs Association.
โTheyโre going to be a little over five times the height of the (Barnegat) lighthouse. The tripod that thatโs going to sit upon is about a block (in size). So, weโre talking about massive structures. The span of those blades on those turbines, theyโre going to be about two football fields from tip to tip.โ
Gutowski voiced concern about impact on commercial seafood catch and other sea life of a proposed 200- to 250-turbine array in an area of the ocean stretching from Barnegat Light to Atlantic City. The project is awaiting final approval.
The Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind lease is located on 183,353 acres in what he noted is a โflourishing fishing ground that youโve had fishermen for the last 20 years break their backs to sustain.โ He was referring to research and alterations that the scallop industry has made to successfully preserve a harvest for future years.
The Joint Council of Taxpayers Associations of Long Beach Island compiled a Frequently Asked Questions summary of the wind farm project 10 miles east of Long Beach Island, which is on the website barnegatlighttaxpayer.org under the subheading โWeather and the Environment.โ The BLTA has 573 member households, but the website is accessible to the public.