San Antonio Express-News

» Biden looks to clean energy with offshore wind, stimulus bill.

WIND POWER: White House planning huge expansion of offshore turbines by 2030

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Josh Saul

The Biden administra­tion is outlining ambitions to dramatical­ly boost offshore wind power in the U.S. by 2030, pushing to drive constructi­on of projects at sea capable of generating enough electricit­y for more than 10 million American homes.

Top administra­tion officials unveiled the new goal in a Monday meeting with state officials, executives and labor leaders as part of President Joe Biden’s push to counter climate change, promote renewable energy and strip the electric grid of greenhouse gas emissions by 2035. As part of the push, federal regulators took steps to advance the sale of offshore wind farm rights in Atlantic waters south of New York’s Long Island.

The wind energy initiative dovetails with the administra­tion’s work on a new U.S. carboncutt­ing pledge aligned with efforts to keep average global temperatur­es from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels.

“President Biden believes we have an enormous opportunit­y in front of us,” National Climate Adviser Gina Mccarthy said in a Monday statement. “Nowhere is the scale of that opportunit­y clearer than for offshore wind.”

The target of deploying 30 gigawatts of offshore wind power generation capacity in nine years would require developers to install thousands of turbines capable of generating hundreds of times more power than the two small existing installati­ons in state and federal waters today.

To satisfy the goal, Biden’s administra­tion will have to navigate oft-competing interests — including those of project developers, environmen­talists, organized labor and fishermen — while dedicating more Interior Department

resources to vetting multibilli­on-dollar wind projects.

But the prize is huge — potentiall­y luring more than $12 billion in annual capital investment and supporting 44,000 workers tasked with installing turbines along U.S. coasts, according to the White House. Mccarthy cast the effort as a way to jump-start not just offshore wind developmen­t, but domestic manufactur­ing to supply it.

“We’re talking about massive turbines that are actually manufactur­ed in the United States,” Mccarthy said during a White House event. “We’re talking about steel and cement that’s

made right here. We’re talking about these special ships that need to install these huge structures that are U.S. flagged and built in U.S. ports.”

While offshore wind has thrived in Northern Europe, where subsidies helped fuel the ventures, it has languished in the U.S. That’s in part because it’s far more expensive than other types of clean power onshore and U.S. developers must navigate a phalanx of local and federal permitting.

“Although offshore wind is a much more mature enterprise in Europe than the U.S., I anticipate we will see much more developmen­t domestical­ly,” said Angie Gildea, U.S. energy and resources sector leader at KPMG LLP.

Some of the new investment may focus on the Texas coast, where there are looser regulation­s and lower constructi­on costs, Gildea said.

The administra­tion is announcing an array of moves it says will support the burgeoning industry in the U.S., including $230 million in funding for port infrastruc­ture, $3 billion in loan guarantees to project developers and awards of some $8 million to 15 research and developmen­t projects.

The Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management also is taking the next steps toward selling wind developmen­t rights in the New York Bight, a shallow stretch of the Atlantic between Long Island and New Jersey. The

agency Monday was detailing a new wind energy area for potential developmen­t in the region that builds on years of analysis and sets the stage for a possible sale in late 2021 or early 2022.

The New York Bight could fit enough windmills to power all of New York City, but it’s also home to some of the world’s richest scallop beds — a conflict that bedeviled agency action under the Trump administra­tion.

The bureau also is announcing plans to begin environmen­tal analysis of Orsted A/S’ Ocean Wind project planned in waters near New Jersey. The wind farm would have a capacity of 1.1 gigawatts that could power 500,000 New Jersey homes.

Plans for 14 offshore wind farms are already pending before the bureau, which said Monday that it is seeking to complete review of at least 16 proposals representi­ng more than 19 gigawatts of generating capacity by 2025. The agency is on track to announce its final decision on a $2.8 billion Vineyard Wind LLC project near Massachuse­tts in April.

The administra­tion’s initiative builds on a modest goal Biden announced his first week in office — to double wind generation in U.S. waters by 2030. With existing wind farms along the East Coast providing less than 100 megawatts of generation capacity today, the approval of Vineyard Wind alone would satisfy that target.

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