Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Gov. Ron Deran•is’ office quie•ly backed elorida ban on wind energy

- By Emily L. Mahoney Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA, Fla. — Gov.

Ron Desantis’ office quietly helped write a bill to curtail wind energy in the state of Florida, email records provided to the Tampa Bay Times show.

A version of that bill is now awaiting Desantis’ signature to become law, which will ban offshore wind turbines in state waters. It also proposes to delete the majority of references to climate change found in state law, the Times previously reported.

Florida lawmakers passed the bills, Senate Bill 1624 and House Bill 1645, in early March, even though the state has no operationa­l wind farms because Florida generally has slower wind speeds. Still, the ban on offshore turbines in state waters puzzled and frustrated opponents, who pointed to the fact that wind energy technology is rapidly improving and offshore wind energy could become more feasible in the near future. The bills’ sponsors, including Sen. Jay Collins, R-tampa, said if that happens, they’d repeal the ban.

While debate over the bill continued in the halls of the Legislatur­e, Desantis’ office weighed in via email. Cody Farrill, a deputy chief of staff in the governor’s office, sent wording related to the wind ban multiple times to Collins and his staff in late January and early February. Some of the emails include Rep. Thad Altman, R-indialanti­c, who, along with Collins in the Senate, sponsored a standalone ban on wind energy. That bill received no hearings, which by February meant it was in danger of dying.

“As discussed with Rep. Altman and Senator

Collins, this is the preferred alternativ­e for” the bills banning wind energy, wrote Farrill in one email addressed to the two lawmakers. It included an attachment with proposed bill language that would prohibit “the constructi­on, operation, or expansion of a wind energy facility or an offshore wind energy facility in this state.”

That ban on all wind energy in the state is more expansive than the offshoresp­ecific language eventually passed by lawmakers. In mid-february, similar language curbing wind energy was tacked on to a larger energy omnibus bill that had momentum in the Legislatur­e, and was eventually passed by lawmakers.

The emails were first reported by independen­t journalist Jason Garcia of the Seeking Rents newsletter. They were provided to the Tampa Bay Times by the Energy and Policy Institute, a utilities watchdog group, which obtained them through a public records request.

The governor’s office did not respond to emails asking about his staff ’s involvemen­t and why the governor was interested in banning wind energy. Collins and Altman did not respond to voicemails seeking comment. Neither did Rep. Bobby Payne, R-palatka, who sponsored the House version of the energy omnibus bill.

It’s unclear whether the governor’s office authored the original language that appeared in the first version of the wind energy ban, filed in early January. The first email included in the records request showing Farrill suggesting language tweaks was from Jan. 30.

In some of the suggestion­s, the governor’s office focused on banning wind energy facilities near “critical infrastruc­ture.” At one point, a draft borrowed language from a separate law that limits land purchases by residents of certain foreign adversarie­s — including

China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and Venezuela — near similar infrastruc­ture.

“The close involvemen­t of the governor’s office in the wind energy ban really seems to indicate that this is another Desantis culture war in an attempt to win political points as opposed to addressing any serious issues that Floridians are actually concerned about,” said Alissa Jean Schafer, a research and communicat­ions manager at the Energy and Policy Institute. She said that the attempts to ban wind turbines near critical infrastruc­ture could “lay a foundation for antirenewa­bles fear-mongering.”

During the legislativ­e session, rumors spread that Desantis was backing the offshore wind ban. A Times/herald reporter in late February asked Florida House Speaker Paul Renner whether it was something the governor wanted.

“I don’t know who wanted it,” Renner said at the time, adding that the prohibitio­n made sense for the state.

“It’s very similar to offshore drilling: Floridians don’t want to sit on the beach and look at oil derricks and they don’t want to sit on the beach and look at big windmills right off the beach.”

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