Times Standard (Eureka)

State could lead US in offshore wind energy

- By Eddie Ahn and Jeff Hunerlach Eddie Ahn is the executive director at environmen­tal justice nonprofit Brightline Defense, eddie@ brightline­defense.org. Jeff Hunerlach is a district representa­tive at Operating Engineers Local #3, jhunerlach@oe3.org.

Standing on the beach, the giant blades of an offshore wind turbine 20 miles off the coast appear miniscule — a white pinprick floating on the blue horizon. But up close, the turbines are massive — taller, sometimes, than the Washington Monument and with blades that can span the length of a football field.

The impact of these turbines in transition­ing California to 100% clean energy could be massive — in just seven seconds, the powerful rotation of a single offshore wind turbine can generate enough renewable electricit­y to power a home for an entire day.

In Europe, thousands of these turbines spin off the coast of 12 different nations, generating more than 22,000 megawatts of clean, pollution-free electricit­y. U.S. coastal waters, in contrast, are home to only two offshore wind farms, with a grand total of seven turbines, but President Joe Biden seeks to change that. Earlier this year, the new administra­tion issued an executive order calling for a doubling of the nation’s offshore wind capacity.

Here’s why California’s environmen­tal justice experts and advocates from organized labor think California needs to go all in on offshore wind.

In 2021, this multibilli­ondollar industry is poised for explosive growth — and for the states who move to capitalize on this clean energy resource, the economic and jobs benefits will be enormous. By tapping offshore wind, California could create more than 17,500 goodpaying jobs by 2045 in key regions that lack high-skilled job opportunit­ies — while also improving air quality in frontline communitie­s and delivering on our promise of 100% clean energy.

The East Coast may have a head start on offshore wind developmen­t, but our state is poised to move quickly. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has already initiated the leasing process for three potential offshore wind sites off the coast of California — in Humboldt Bay, Morro Bay and Diablo Canyon — and two additional sites have been identified in studies for potential future developmen­t. If California built all five of these sites to their total generation capacity, they could provide 25% of our electricit­y needs with clean, pollution-free power.

Developing each of these sites will create thousands of jobs through shovel-ready projects. The first step to developmen­t — port revitaliza­tion — can create up to 6,000 local, full-time equivalent jobs per port right off the bat, according to a report from Brightline Defense. And that’s just the beginning — investing in offshore wind will generate thousands of additional jobs in constructi­on, manufactur­ing, turbine demonstrat­ion and transmissi­on line projects.

Many of the jobs created will require mandated apprentice­ship training programs — creating new career pathways in the trades for workers who may have been displaced during the COVID-19 downturn. These opportunit­ies will also prepare the state’s workforce for building, operating and maintainin­g California’s 100% clean energy electricit­y grid.

By meeting our electricit­y needs through clean, pollutionf­ree offshore wind energy, California can also deliver vital air quality improvemen­ts in frontline communitie­s. About 78% of California’s gas power plants reside in communitie­s identified by CalEPA as having the state’s highest burden of poverty and cumulative environmen­tal health burdens.

This legislativ­e session, California policymake­rs have a fantastic opportunit­y to advance California’s progress toward 100% clean energy and capitalize on the economic and air quality opportunit­ies by voting to pass Assembly Bill 525, introduced by Assemblyme­mber David Chiu, a Democrat from San Francisco. The bill would set a target of producing 10 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2040.

By investing in offshore wind energy, California can kickstart our economic recovery, create good jobs in hard-hit communitie­s and cut lung-damaging pollution across the state. The Golden State can still lead the nation on offshore wind — but we need to move quickly. This opportunit­y is ours to lose.

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