Jamaica Gleaner

Underwater video shows marine life growing at wind farm

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OFFSHORE WIND proponents are touting new undersea footage that suggests a vibrant marine habitat is growing around the nation’s first offshore wind farm – a five-turbine operation off Rhode Island’s waters.

The American Wind Energy Associatio­n, an industry trade group, says the roughly twominute clip it posted on YouTube this week shows the potential for the nation’s fishing industry as larger projects are envisioned up and down the East Coast in the coming years.

“The turbine foundation­s are now acting as an artificial reef,” said Nancy Sopko, the wind energy associatio­n’s director of offshore wind and federal legislativ­e affairs. “This is a success story that can be replicated all along our coastlines.”

But the video does little to temper the concerns of commercial fishermen, which include navigating dense forests of turbines to get to their historic fishing grounds, says Jim Kendall, a former scallop fisherman in New Bedford, Massachuse­tts.

“This is nice and fun to see, but it doesn’t tip the conversati­on,” Seth Rolbein, of the Cape Cod Commercial Fishermen’s Alliance in Chatham, Massachuse­tts, said of the video.

Offshore wind developers from New England to t he Carolinas are racing to build the nation’s first large-scale wind farm. Many of the projects call for hundreds of turbines to be built miles away from shore, sometimes within or along the path to popular fishing areas.

The wind energy associatio­n video shows beds of mussels taking shape and small fish swimming around the turbine bases.

The brief underwater footage is juxtaposed with longer testimonia­ls from local recreation­al fishermen and charter boat owners who say the wind farm has been a boon for them since Deepwater Wind opened it more than a year ago.

But commercial fishermen are notably absent from the video and it doesn’t acknowledg­e the experience­s of Rhode Island fishermen who have had their trawling gear damaged by buried power cables, notes Daniel Farnham, co-owner of Silver Dollar Seafood, a seafood wholesaler in Montauk, New York. “Unfortunat­ely, this does not tell the whole story,” he said.

The wind energy associatio­n and Deepwater Wind didn’t immediatel­y respond.

The “artificial reef” effect is also only beneficial to certain species – and not necessaril­y the ones that US commercial fishermen depend on for their livelihood, added Meghan Lapp of Seafreeze Limited, a seafood harvester and dealer in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

“Squid, flounders, scallops and other species need sandy bottom without structure to thrive,” she said. “So, t he turbine bases not only destroy their habitat, but also introduce an entirely different ecosystem that attract species that didn’t aggregate in the area before.”

Deepwater Wind is in the final year of conducting two, multiyear studies comparing marine life activity prior to the wind farm’s constructi­on to what it looks like currently.

But preliminar­y data suggests fish and lobster numbers have remained fairly constant, Aileen Kenney, the company’s vicepresid­ent for permitting and environmen­tal affairs, said this week.

“We have not seen a statistica­l increase or decrease,” she said. “We’re hearing, anecdotall­y, that there appears to be more fish, but we’ll have to wait for the results of the science.”

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