Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Windstorm brewing off N.Y., N.J.

Turbines will kill tourism, beach town businesses tell states

- WAYNE PARRY

LONG BEACH TOWNSHIP, N.J. — Government supporters of offshore wind energy projects in New Jersey and New York are trading blows with opponents in some shore towns who say many vacationer­s and local residents don’t want to see turbines filling the ocean horizon.

Eight Jersey Shore beach towns wrote to state utility regulators last week, saying one wind farm proposal will be vastly more expensive than projected, and will cost tourism-driven jobs and economic activity.

Their move came on the same day that federal energy regulators approved new rules to streamline the applicatio­n and approval processes for offshore wind farms, and also the day that New York Gov. Kathy Hochul issued supply chain and logistics proposals to help her state’s offshore wind industry. Hochul’s move came days after three New York projects were scrapped because the companies and state regulators couldn’t agree on the financial terms.

Shore towns spanning much of New Jersey’s 127-mile coastline wrote to the state’s Board of Public Utilities, saying the proposed Atlantic Shores wind farm will be costlier than originally proposed, particular­ly if the developers are allowed to re-bid it.

An economic analysis sent by Long Beach Township, Beach Haven, Ship Bottom, Barnegat Light, Surf City, Harvey Cedars, Brigantine and Ventnor predicts reduced visitation to the Jersey Shore by people who don’t want to see windmills on the horizon could cost Ocean County alone more than $668 million in economic losses.

“The Atlantic Shores project will devastate the economies of the shore municipali­ties by deterring visitors and eliminatin­g thousands of jobs,” said James Mancini, mayor of Long Beach Township on Long Beach Island. “It is imperative that any offshore wind projects are placed far enough out to avoid these drastic impacts, which adversely affect not only the shore municipali­ties’ residents, visitors and businesses, but all of New Jersey’s residents.”

The towns also said allowing the project owners to rebid would increase additional costs to ratepayers to $10 billion, up from $3.7 billion.

The BPU and Atlantic Shores did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment. But the New Jersey Offshore Wind Alliance said the law firm that wrote to New Jersey regulators is “engaged in misguided litigation against offshore wind developmen­t,” and that an operating wind farm off Block Island, Rhode Island, proves that offshore wind farms can coexist with tourism and recreation­al fisheries.

Atlantic Shores would have 157 turbines and would be located 8.7 miles from shore, among the closest projects proposed for the state’s shoreline. It is a partnershi­p between Shell New Energies US LLC and EDF-RE Offshore Developmen­t LLC.

It is one of three offshore wind projects currently pending in New Jersey. The state Board of Public Utilities in January chose Attentive Energy LLC and Leading Light Wind LLC to build offshore wind projects.

Also last week, U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced that the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and the Bureau of Safety and Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t finalized new regulation­s for offshore wind projects intended to save the industry $1.9 billion over the next 20 years. It would streamline some processes, eliminate what the agencies called duplicativ­e requiremen­ts and allow money for eventual decomissio­ning work to be put up incrementa­lly instead of all at once at the start of a project.

That same day, New York’s governor responded to the collapse of three offshore wind projects last week by issuing requests for proposals and informatio­n regarding supply chains and logistics for offshore wind projects. That followed the state canceling three preliminar­ily approved offshore wind projects after failing to reach final agreements with any of them.

New York provisiona­lly approved the projects in October 2023. They are Attentive Energy One being developed by TotalEnerg­ies Rise Light & Power and Corio Generation; Community Offshore Wind and Vineyard Offshore’s Excelsior Wind.

 ?? (AP/Wayne Parry) ?? The sun sets behind spinning land-based wind turbines in Atlantic City, N.J., in December.
(AP/Wayne Parry) The sun sets behind spinning land-based wind turbines in Atlantic City, N.J., in December.

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