The Day

Clean energy plans divide environmen­talists

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Portland, Maine (AP) — Sprawling wind farms located off the coast. Hydropower transmissi­on lines that cut through some of America’s most beloved forests and rivers. Solar megaprojec­ts of unpreceden­ted size.

As President Joe Biden’s administra­tion plans to fight climate change by weaning the nation off fossil fuels, these 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 impact on the environmen­t.

Some argue projects like the planned 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind offshore wind project off New England would kill birds. Others complain that undertakin­gs such as the proposed Champlain Hudson Power Express clean power cable, which could start constructi­on 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 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 hydro power — about a sixth of today’s U.S. electricit­y generation.

Reaching the goal would require approval of large renewables projects, such as the Champlain Hudson cable, which would deliver 1,000 megawatts of hydropower to the New York City area. That’s enough to power about a 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 chairman of the New York State Council of Trout Unlimited, support the project.

The environmen­tal impacts 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.

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