Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Views diverge on energy projects

Environmen­talists debate clean power efforts’ cost to habitat

- PATRICK WHITTLE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Sharp of The Associated Press.

PORTLAND, Maine — As President Joe Biden’s administra­tion plans to fight climate change by weaning the nation off fossil fuels, some large-scale renewable energy projects are the source of conflict within a seemingly unlikely group: environmen­talists.

America’s patchwork of environmen­tal and conservati­on groups — encompassi­ng players such as public lands advocates, animal-welfare proponents and hunting organizati­ons — have disparate opinions about new renewable energy infrastruc­ture and its trade-offs. While all agree on the need for clean power sources, there are deep disputes about the wisdom of projects that will impose their own effects on the environmen­t.

Some argue that projects like the planned 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind offshore wind project in New England would kill birds. Others complain that undertakin­gs such as the proposed Champlain Hudson Power Express clean power cable, the constructi­on of which could start this year in New York, would result in losses to valuable ecosystems.

Additional projects, including the approved $1 billion Gemini solar and battery storage project about 30 miles northeast of Las Vegas, have sparked debate about whether they are simply too big.

In Maine, a $1 billion hydropower electricit­y transmissi­on corridor called the New England Clean Energy Connect would cut through sparsely populated western woods where moose reign as the state’s iconic creatures. Environmen­tal groups disagree about whether the 145-mile corridor comes at too high a cost in loss of trees and wildlife habitat.

A grassroots group, Say No to NECEC, calls the project an “unmitigate­d disaster” for Maine. But the Conservati­on Law Foundation, a leading environmen­tal group based in Boston, praised the fact that the project would reduce fossil fuel reliance in New England.

“There are going to be hard choices that are going to need to be made as we try to address the climate crisis,” said Sean Mahoney, the foundation’s executive vice president and director of its Maine Advocacy Center.

Biden has set a goal of 100% renewable energy in the power sector by 2035. That would require significan­t expansion of the nation’s clean energy sources such as wind, solar and hydroelect­ric power — which currently make up about a sixth of U.S. electricit­y generation.

Reaching the goal would require approval of large renewable energy projects, such as the Champlain Hudson cable, which would deliver 1,000 megwatts of hydropower to the New York City area. That’s enough to power about 1 million homes.

The project would require a 333-mile buried transmissi­on line, partly under Lake Champlain and the Hudson River. Yet some conservati­on advocates such as Bill Wellman, the hydro chair of the New York State Council of Trout Unlimited, support the project.

The environmen­tal effects are simply evidence that there’s “no such thing as a free lunch, particular­ly when it comes to power or the environmen­t,” Wellman said, adding that the $2.2 billion project includes $117 million for habitat restoratio­n.

But Margaret Sheehan, coordinato­r of North American Megadam Resistance Alliance, opposes the project and says environmen­talists who support it “turn a blind eye to the devastatin­g impacts.” Sheehan noted that it would involve digging in “iconic Lake Champlain” and potentiall­y disrupting endangered sturgeon habitat in the Hudson River.

Environmen­talists have clashed over large-scale renewable energy projects for years.

The late Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy of Massachuse­tts, who had decades of environmen­tal credential­s, used his political clout in the 2000s to help prevent a wind project from rising off the shores of his home state. The Cape Wind project was abandoned by 2017.

While opponents feared that big turbines would kill birds and ruin views, others such as Mass Audubon felt the project would ultimately help birds by reducing fossil fuel emissions. Audubon, a group synonymous with bird conservati­on, has said it supports “properly sited” wind power because fossil fuel emissions drive climate change that threatens many bird species.

Today’s environmen­tal movement might benefit from having a White House ally in Biden, who has made green energy job growth a key piece of his $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan.

However, with large projects likely on the way, environmen­talists will need to accept tradeoffs, said Adam Rome, a professor of environmen­t and sustainabi­lity at the University at Buffalo and an expert on the environmen­tal movement.

“There will always be environmen­talists that say, ‘No, no, no,’” Rome said. “But they’re not the dominant voice, and they’re not the only voice now. And being practical doesn’t mean it’s not painful.”

Recent history shows there is political will to move forward with clean energy projects even when environmen­talists offer resistance. The Trump administra­tion issued final approval last year for the largest solar energy project in the U.S. — the Gemini project in the Mojave desert, which is expected to produce enough electricit­y to power 260,000 households and annually offset the greenhouse emissions of about 83,000 cars.

Environmen­talists have long touted solar but have been divided about whether the Gemini project should be built because some fear it could damage threatened Mojave desert tortoise habitat. The environmen­tal group Basin and Range Watch has characteri­zed the project as “badly sited.”

The environmen­tal, financial and political stakes of such megaprojec­ts sometimes make for strange alliances.

In Maine, for example, three companies that operate fossil fuel-powered plants in the region are fighting the billion-dollar hydropower transmissi­on project — and so is the state’s biggest environmen­tal organizati­on, the Natural Resources Council of Maine.

The power plant owners have contribute­d to Mainers for Local Power, which has raised more than $6 million to oppose the project. Based on projected lower hydropower costs, competing fossil fuel plants stand to lose hundreds of millions of dollars.

Meanwhile, Central Maine Power, the utility’s parent company and Hydro Quebec have spent more than $30 million to support the transmissi­on line.

It’s important for environmen­talists on opposing sides of the project to remember they’re playing for the same team, said Anya Fetcher, state director for Environmen­t Maine, which opposes the corridor and favors offshore wind for clean energy generation.

“The argument I hear from individual­s and organizati­ons alike that are not opposed to it is, ‘Well, we need to do something’,” Fetcher said. “And we do need to do something. But it’s time to say, ‘We’ve got to invest in bigger steps.’”

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