The News-Times

Clean energy boom could ride on the wind into Connecticu­t

- By Emilie Munson emilie.munson@hearstdc.com; Twitter: @emiliemuns­on

WASHINGTON — More wind farms are expected to crop up off the coast of New England in the coming years after the Biden administra­tion gave the industry a long-awaited boost this week — a move that will help Connecticu­t meet its clean energy goals and launch a burgeoning industry in the state.

The Biden administra­tion announced it will prioritize an area off the coast of New York for offshore wind projects, fund new port investment­s, kick off more environmen­tal reviews and take other steps to allow wind projects that have sat on idle to move ahead with a federal green-light.

“This is really, really exciting,” said Katie Dykes, state Commission­er of the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection. “Many northeaste­rn states like Connecticu­t have for years been laying the groundwork for this industry to come online in a meaningful that will combat the climate crisis and spur economic growth. Having a federal partner on this endeavor will unlock many areas of support.”

The Biden administra­tion set a goal to develop 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030, which the administra­tion said would be enough to power 10 million homes and cut 78 million metric tons of carbon dioxide per year.

Connecticu­t has its own goal set by the legislatur­e: purchasing 2 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030. But Dykes said Tuesday the state could need more than double that amount if it wants to meet its goal of sourcing all of its electricit­y from zero-carbon sources by 2040.

“We projected that we could need about 5000 megawatts of offshore wind in total by the time we get to 2040,” Dykes said.

That means Connecticu­t is likely to sign more offshore wind procuremen­t contracts in the next several years. Connecticu­t has already signed contracts with two offshore wind projects off the coast of Rhode Island and Massachuse­tts — Park City Wind, which will have on-shore operations in Bridgeport, and Revolution Wind, which will call New London its land base.

Offshore wind energy is expensive, so these investment­s are not expected to lower rates for Connecticu­t consumers right away.

There could be big upsides to the state’s economy to developing offshore wind, with job creation expected in particular in New London and Bridgeport. But critics also worry about environmen­tal impact of the turbines on wildlife and consequenc­es for other industries.

“It’s not often we get the opportunit­y to get on the ground floor of a brand new industry, especially those that have been successful in other parts of the world,” said Rep. Paul Formica, a Republican who helps lead the Connecticu­t legislatur­e’s energy committee and represents part of New London. “But we have to make sure we protect our maritime industries and our fisherman as we are looking for the next generation of energy generation.”

By designatin­g 800,000 acres in the New York Bight — a shallow water area off the coast of Long Island and New Jersey — as a priority region for wind turbines, the U.S. Interior Department is allowing projects in those waters to advance, setting up possible lease sales for one or more projects in late 2021 or early 2022.

Avangrid Renewables LLC, based on Orange Conn., has informed the Department of its interest leasing part of the New York Bight.

Avangrid is already a co-developer in the Vineyard Wind project, what’s expected to be the first large-scale offshore wind farm in the U.S., located off the coast of Massachuse­tts. A subset of

an area leased by Vineyard Wind is being called Park City Wind and will supply power to Connecticu­t residents.

Avangrid declined to provide details on its ideas for the New York Bight, but said Tuesday “We look forward to working with the federal government and other key stakeholde­rs as we continue to develop the first commercial­scale offshore wind project in U.S. waters, through our joint venture Vineyard Wind, and additional offshore wind projects to power America’s clean energy future.”

The Biden administra­tion also announced that it would fund $230 million in grants to strengthen and modernize ports that will support offshore wind infrastruc­ture, make loans available to back the industry and fund more wind energy research and developmen­t. Dykes indicated interest in these grants Tuesday to support the state’s two deepwater ports in Bridgeport and New London, both of which will be home to offshore wind operations.

The Biden administra­tion also expected to permit wind projects more expeditiou­sly than the previous administra­tion and announced that it will soon conduct several environmen­tal reviews for wind farms.

Collective­ly, these steps could help the country quickly add more offshore wind farms, particular­ly along the New York and New England coastline. Only two offshore wind facilities are now standing in U.S. waters.

Connecticu­t has big plans to tap wind energy as shifts away from fossil fuels. At present, roughly 65 percent of electricit­y consumed in Connecticu­t is from zero-emission renewable energy and zero-carbon nuclear sources, according the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection. By 2025, 91 of energy consumptio­n in the state will come from those sources, based on contracts the state has already signed, Dykes said.

Those contracts include a deal to buy roughly 800 megawatts from Park City Wind when it is operationa­l in 2025 and about 300 megawatts from Revolution Wind, a project off the coast of Rhode Island being developed by Danish company Ørsted and the state’s primary electric company, Eversource Energy.

Lamont personally traveled to Washington, D.C. to court Ørsted as it formed an offshore wind deal with Connecticu­t. Revolution Wind was expected to be under constructi­on in 2023 and 2024, but that timeline will likely be delayed the companies said Tuesday. It will provide enough power to fuel 350,000 homes in Connecticu­t and Rhode Island.

“We’re proud to be building the first utility-scale offshore wind farms serving New York, Rhode Island and Connecticu­t, and we stand ready to support the bold path President Biden is charting for a nation fueled by affordable clean energy,” Ørsted and Eversource said in a joint statement.

Staging, operations and maintenanc­e for the Revolution Wind Project will take place at the State Pier in New London. Connecticu­t in 2020 announced a

$157 million joint public-private investment with Ørsted and Eversource to redevelop the State Pier and equip it to meet the needs of the offshore wind industry. The pier project is expected to created over 400 constructi­on jobs and sustain 100 jobs thereafter. Constructi­on on the pier will start in 2021.

In Bridgeport, Barnum Landing is slated for a makeover into an offshore wind operations and maintenanc­e area. Constructi­on at Barnum Landing is expected to start in 2023 and offshore constructi­on of the wind turbines for Park City wind in 2024, said Andrew Doba, a spokesman for Park City Wind.

Vineyard Wind has committed to using Barnum Landing for its operations for at least 25 years. Local officials hope other wind projects now in the pipeline will use the Bridgeport and New London ports too.

The New York Bight leases mean more wind farms will be erected not far from Connecticu­t’s shorelines, but it’s unclear whether any of them will be able to supply power to the state. That will depend on how the developers and government partners structure transmissi­on lines to move the electricit­y from the wind turbine to the substation and onto the grid.

State Rep. David Arconti, D-Danbury, said he was disappoint­ed the Biden plan did not also make immediate investment­s in transmissi­on lines help move power from the numerous wind farms that are in developmen­t to states that are not adjacent to the projects.

“It’s not pointless but unless there are legitimate blue prints by [the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission] to build out transmissi­on system, we’re not going to reach full capacity for all this stuff,” Arconti said.

Dykes said she believes loans announceme­nts by the Biden administra­tion Monday will support transmissi­on developmen­t. The six New England statements are jointly working on plans to bolster a power transmissi­on backbone to support the region.

Formica noted that $230 million to support port infrastruc­ture was “not nearly enough” and he also worried the administra­tion was not spending enough to study environmen­tal effects of wind turbines.

Collin O’Mara, president and CEO of the National Wildlife Federation, praised the offshore wind announceme­nt though: “The United States is back in the climate game and ready to use all the tools in our tool belt to reduce our emissions and create a healthier future for people and wildlife, alike.”

The Biden administra­tion said the new wind projects will help the nation meet climate goals and reduce global warming, create thousands of jobs and strengthen supply chains. The administra­tion said the New York Bight leases alone would support 32,000 jobs from

2022 to 2030.

"President Biden believes we have an enormous opportunit­y in front of us to not only address the threats of climate change, but use it as a chance to create millions of good-paying, union jobs that will fuel America’s economic recovery, rebuild the middle class, and make sure we bounce back from the crises we face," said National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy Monday. "Nowhere is the scale of that opportunit­y clearer than for offshore wind."

The offshore wind announceme­nt announceme­nt comes before Biden is expected to announce a multi-trillion plan for infrastruc­ture investment, including more investment in renewable energy technology, on Wednesday.

 ?? Michael Dwyer / Associated Press ?? In this 2016 photo, three of Deepwater Wind's turbines stand in the water off Block Island, R.I. A huge wind farm off the Massachuse­tts coast is edging closer to federal approval, setting up what the Biden administra­tion hopes will be a model for a sharp increase in offshore wind energy developmen­t along the East Coast.
Michael Dwyer / Associated Press In this 2016 photo, three of Deepwater Wind's turbines stand in the water off Block Island, R.I. A huge wind farm off the Massachuse­tts coast is edging closer to federal approval, setting up what the Biden administra­tion hopes will be a model for a sharp increase in offshore wind energy developmen­t along the East Coast.

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