March 8, 2018 โ ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. โ After building New Jerseyโs only wind-energy complex here in 2005, Paul J. Gallagher teamed up with a group of commercial fishermen on an even more ambitious project: building the nationโs first offshore wind farm within sight of the cityโs famous Boardwalk.
Fishermenโs Energy LLC spent millions of dollars to obtain permits to build a demonstration project in state waters three miles off Atlantic City. But Gov. Chris Christie, concerned about the high costs of offshore wind, declined to create the rules needed to get the industry off the ground. Fishermenโs closed its office last year and let go its staff after a $47 million federal grant expired.
โLast year was hard,โ said Gallagher, 67, Fishermenโs chief operating officer. โWe just slowed to a crawl and cut a lot of expenses.โ
The political winds have shifted in New Jersey, and Gov. Murphyโs inauguration in January has dramatically revived prospects for the stateโs offshore wind industry, which advocates hope could supply up to a third of the stateโs power by 2030.
The new governor signed an executive order directing the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities to restart the process to create the rules governing the offshore wind market, which was authorized under the stateโs landmark 2010 Offshore Wind Economic Development Act but stalled under Christie.
Gallagher has returned to the public circuit, selling Fishermenโs as the only fully permitted shovel-ready offshore project in New Jersey, though it lost the title as Americaโs first offshore commercial project to a Rhode Island wind farm in 2016.
โWeโre maybe the only offshore project in the United States that can be built in the next 24 months,โ Gallagher said.
Read the full story at the Philadelphia Inquirer
