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New Jersey: Gov. Murphy Fills Sails of Fishermenโ€™s Energy Wind Farm

March 1, 2018 โ€” A new governor with a commitment to renewable energy is good for the proponents of off-shore wind energy, but has Gov. Phil Murphyโ€™s tenure come too late for Fishermenโ€™s Energy, which has all the permits to install six Siemens 4-megawatt turbines at a site 4.5 kilometers off the Atlantic City coastline?

Fishermenโ€™s Energy, a consortium of commercial and recreational fishermen, has been trying since 2005 to build a demonstration project of five wind turbines off Atlantic City. Over the years, it has jumped through all the federal and state regulation hoops and received all their permits. However, it became embroiled in a dispute with the N.J. Board of Public Utilities over whether the project was eligible to secure a โ€œpower offtake agreementโ€ that would set up a system of Offshore Renewable Energy Certificates that could be sold to power companies to offset their carbon footprint, much as solar power SRECs do today.

The BPU denied the consortiumโ€™s OREC application twice. Although the Legislature got involved and passed two bills in 2016 that would have sidestepped the BPUโ€™s negative stance, then-Gov. Chris Christie pocket-vetoed them.

Since then, Fishermenโ€™s Energyโ€™s hopes have been left hanging in the wind, but the project is still alive, according to Barnegat Mayor Kirk Larson, whose Viking Village Seafood company invested in Fishermenโ€™s Energy along with partners Atlantic Cape Fisheries, Cold Spring Fish and Supply Co. out of Cape May, Dock Street Seafood out of Wildwood and Eastern Shore Seafood out of Mappsville, Va.

Larson directed all future calls about Fishermenโ€™s to the company spokesman and COO Paul Gallagher.

On Tuesday, Gallagher said Murphyโ€™s proposals mean things are looking up for Fishermenโ€™s.

Read the full story at the Sand Paper

 

East Coast of U.S. Emerging Into a Hotbed for Offshore Wind

February 7, 2018 โ€” Atlantic coast states might be protesting President Trumpโ€™s plan to expand offshore oil drilling, but theyโ€™re increasingly embracing a different kind of seaborne energy: wind.

States bordering the outer continental shelf are looking for carbon-free electricity, even as the Trump administration rolls back rules requiring it.

Last week, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) announced that his state will aim for 3,500 megawatts of installed offshore wind by 2030, enough to power 1 million homes. Massachusetts has a goal to build 1,600 MW of offshore wind power by 2027, and New York has committed to 2,400 MW by 2030.

At the same time, wind technology is quickly advancing, thanks to its popularity in Europe. Ten countries across Europe had deployed 12,600 MW of offshore wind power by the end of 2016. In the United States, the Interior Departmentโ€™s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has issued 13 wind energy leases off the Atlantic coast. In late 2016, the first offshore wind farm in the United States came online about 4 miles off the coast of Block Island, R.I.

Itโ€™s unclear how the growth in offshore wind might be affected by Trumpโ€™s plan to open nearly all U.S. waters to oil and gas drilling.

But there are hints that the two types of development could come into contact on the open water.

According to BOEMโ€™s draft proposed 2019-24 offshore oil and gas leasing plan, any drilling off the Atlantic Seaboard would have to be โ€œcoordinatedโ€ with current and future offshore wind development. The agency predicts that more wind projects are likely to be built between 2019 and 2024, when oil and gas lease sales are slated to be held.

Experts said itโ€™s unlikely there would be direct competition for the same slice of ocean between the two industries. But thatโ€™s a hard question to answer.

Kevin Book, managing director of research for ClearView Energy Partners LLC, said itโ€™s too early to know how offshore wind and oil and gas development might interact off the East Coast. Historically, offshore wind has been a nascent industry, and no one has drilled for oil in the Atlantic for decades. Itโ€™s been so long that developers have little idea what type of oil reserves lie under the sea, or if oil companies will want to tap them.

Read the full story from Scientific American/E&E news at IEEFA

 

N.J. to Trump: Stay away from our โ€˜treasured coastal communitiesโ€™

February 2, 2018 โ€” The [Gov. Phil] Murphy administration has sent another signal to Washington that it does not want drilling off the Jersey Shore.

Attorney General Gurbir Grewal joined attorneys general from 11 other states in sending a letter to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on Thursday, objecting to the new plan to drill for oil and natural gas throughout federal waters.

In the letter, the attorneys general express โ€œdeep concernsโ€ and claim that the plan represents โ€œdisregard for vital state interests, economies, and resources.โ€

Grewal was joined by the attorneys general of North Carolina, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Virginia in the letter to Zinke. Each attorney general outlines concerns specific to their states.

Read the full story at NJ.com

 

Murphy restarts big offshore wind plan for New Jersey

February 1, 2018 โ€” ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. โ€” Governor Phil Murphy signed an executive order Wednesday to return the state to national leadership in offshore wind energy.

New Jersey will finally implement the Offshore Wind Economic Development Act of 2010, which languished under Gov. Chris Christie, Murphy said at a press conference at the Atlantic County Utilities Authorityโ€™s wind farm and wastewater treatment plant.

The law creates ratepayer-financing of wind field development through an Offshore Wind Renewable Energy Credit program. But Christieโ€™s administration never finalized regulations to implement it, and developers have not received the approvals from the Board of Public Utilities to move forward, Murphy said.

The order commits the state to quickly generate 1,100 megawatts annually of offshore wind energy, and 3,500 megawatts of generation by the year 2030 โ€” enough to power 1.5 million homes, according to Murphy.

โ€œThirty-five hundred megawatts would make us, I think, the number one aspirational wind field in the world,โ€ Murphy said. Scale, reliability and predictability will make it possible to attract manufacturing, the governor said.

Environment New Jersey Director Doug Oโ€™Malley said New York and Massachusetts have goals of 2,400 and 1,600 megawatts, respectively.

State Senate President Steve Sweeney, a co-sponsor of OWEDA, said the plan is not just to place windmills in the ocean, but to jump-start a wind-energy manufacturing industry.

Murphyโ€™s executive order directs the BPU to begin the rulemaking process and to work with the Department of Environmental Protection to establish an Offshore Wind Strategic Plan.

The BPU must implement a renewable energy credit program and solicit for projects to generate 1,100 megawatts of electric power.

โ€œThis is great news for the people of New Jersey and a positive step forward in bringing offshore wind to the state,โ€ said Thomas Brostrom, president of Orsted North America. The company holds a lease to develop Ocean Wind, a project with the potential to generate 1,000 megawatts of offshore wind about 10 miles off Atlantic City.

Read the full story at the Press of Atlantic City 

 

South Jersey Times: Christie should fight hard to keep drilling ban

January 11, 2018 โ€” With less than a week to go in office and part of his legacy on the line, Gov. Chris Christie has called out President Donald Trump over his administrationโ€™s unilateral call to open the entire East Coast to offshore energy drilling.

The possibility of drilling causing a spill despoiling the Atlantic Coast or otherwise ruining New Jerseyโ€™s tourism and fishing industries has long been a third rail of Garden State politics, uniting Democrats and Republicans alike. Past attempts to increase coastal drilling โ€” and even President Barack Obama authorized them โ€” generally had โ€œopt-outโ€ features for states, often won after protests from New Jersey lawmakers and governors.

The latest move by U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, with Trumpโ€™s apparent blessing, to open both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts to more drilling has no specific carve-outs. A current drilling moratorium for the Atlantic coast was supposed to last until at least 2022.

With all due respect to most of the New Jersey elected officeholders who circled the wagons against the Zinke proposal, just as they had in the past: They have no juice with this president.

Read the full story at the South Jersey Times

 

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