The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Fishermen fear forests of power

- By Philip Marcelo

East Coast fishermen are turning a wary eye toward an emerging upstart: the offshore wind industry.

In New Bedford, Massachuse­tts, the onetime whaling capital made famous in Herman Melville’s “Moby-Dick,” fishermen dread the possibilit­y of navigating a forest of turbines as they make their way to the fishing grounds that havemade it the nation’s most lucrative fishing port for 17 years running.

The state envisions hundreds of wind turbines spinning off the city’s shores in about a decade, enough to power more than 1 million homes.

“You ever see a radar picture

of a wind farm? It’s just one big blob, basically,” said Eric Hansen, 56, a New Bedford scallop boat owner whose family has been in the business for generation­s. “Transit through it will be next to impossible, especially in heavy wind and fog.”

Off New York’s Long Island, an organizati­on representi­ng East Coast scallop- ers has sued the Bureau of Ocean EnergyMana­gement to try to halt a proposal for a nearly 200-turbine wind farm. Commercial fishermen in Maryland’s Ocean City and North Carolina’s Outer Banks have also sounded the alarm about losing access to fishing grounds.

Supporters of offshore wind say they have learned from Europe’s long experience with it. They also point to the more recent opening of America’s lone offshore wind farm, off Rhode Island, as evidence the actual impact to U.S. fishermen will be less than feared.

“We want to do this the right way, and I believe we have a path to do that,” said Matthew Morrissey, a vice president at Deepwater Wind, the Rhode Island company that opened that five-turbine operation off Block Island last December and is proposing larger farms elsewhere along the East Coast.

In New Bedford, where the state has already built a $113 million heavy-duty terminal to take on turbine constructi­on and shipment, city officials envision commercial fishing and offshore wind working hand in hand to revive a region that has long lagged behind nearby Boston.

“There’s a lot more in common between these industries than pulling them apart,” said Edward AnthesWash­burn, executive director of New Bedford’s port,

citing the potential for wind farms to provide fishermen with extra work and to contribute to port investment­s, like a new shipyard.

For f ishermen, the broader concern is that offshore wind farms will only lead to more stifling restrictio­ns.

“Fishermen are losing ground one a nibble at a time,” said Joseph Gilbert, a Stonington, Connecticu­t fisherman who owns boats that range from Virginia to Maine. “Eventually, it adds up to a very large piece of the pie.”

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which oversees wind farm developmen­ts in federal waters, has taken steps to address fishermen’s concerns, among them excluding specific habitats off Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island and New York from wind farm developmen­t, said spokesman Stephen Boutwell.

It has also invested in studies looking specifical­ly at questions raised by fishermen, from the effects of pile-driving during wind farm constructi­on to the effect of electromag­netic fields on fish behavior, he said.

Deepwater Wind, meanwhile, said preliminar­y findings from environmen­tal studies of its Block Island wind farm suggest fish and lobster population­s are “just as strong” as before constructi­on.

The company says it has compensate­d over a dozen fishermen who temporaril­y lost access to their fishing grounds during constructi­on.

But while there haven’t been reports of fishing boats striking the turbines, about a dozen boats have reported trawls getting damaged by concrete structures covering undersea power cables, costing tens of thousands of dollars in equipment and lost fishing time, said Richard Fuka, president of the Rhode Island Fishermen’s Alliance.

U.S. fishermen also cast a worried glance at to Eu- rope, where a range of restrictio­ns have been imposed on fishing around the more than 3,500 turbines spinning off the shores of 10 different countries. U.S. officials and developers stress similar bans aren’t being considered stateside, except during constructi­on.

Studies in the North Sea suggest the turbines act as reefs, supporting mussels that draw fish and other sea life. But where advocates see biodiversi­ty, commercial fishermen point to other studies noting modest effects on native species in Europe.

In the U.K., navigation through wind farms remains challengin­g during bad weather, said Merlin Jackson, treasurer of the Thanet Fishermen’s Associatio­n.

There have been at least two minor cases of fishing boats hitting turbines, he said. Fishermen largely rely on turbine platform lights as guides, but they’re not always well maintained. The most persistent problem has been sea currents exposing buried power cables, prompting restrictio­ns while they’re repaired, he said.

America’s slower, more complex licensing process has “forced more questions to be asked,” and East Coast fishermen seem more unified than many of those in Europe when wind farms were being developed, Jackson said.

“If fishermen can be organized and be allowed to have input into the earliest parts of the planning process, then there should be a way forward,” Jackson said.

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