Call & Times

Biden appointee: Windmills will brings ‘gust’ of job growth

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PROVIDENCE (AP) — U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said Thursday that the administra­tion’s goal for offshore wind and the projects being developed now represent a “gust of job growth throughout the country.”

Granholm visited a new offshore wind manufactur­ing hub in Providence to talk about the Biden administra­tion’s plan to deploy 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030 and to promote the spending in the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture deal.

“More offshore wind means more jobs for iron workers, line workers, engineers, electricia­ns, plumbers, pipefitter­s,” she said. “Jobs in mining and manufactur­ing and management and operations and sales, not to mention of course the benefit to surroundin­g communitie­s.”

At the Port of Providence, Orsted, a Danish energy company, and the utility Eversource are constructi­ng a building for the fabricatio­n and assembly of large, advanced components for turbine foundation­s. Orsted officials gave Granholm and Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee a tour. The group met union workers who are building the facility.

McKee said he envisions Rhode Island as the “base camp” to support the offshore wind supply chain along the East Coast. Granholm said looking at the building reminded her of a proverb: “When the winds of change blow, some build walls, others build windmills.”

The first U.S. offshore wind farm began operating off Block Island in late 2016. That $350 million facility went offline for several months this year due to mechanical issues.

Eversource President and CEO Joe Nolan said the Biden administra­tion’s subsidies for his company are a “breath of fresh air.” Both Nolan and Orsted Offshore North America CEO David Hardy said taxpayer subsidies are critical while the U.S. industry is in the early stages.

“The momentum is happening,” Nolan said. “We need it to continue.”

“It’s a young industry,” added Hardy. “We need help.”

Their manufactur­ing hub at the port is scheduled to be finished this spring to support two offshore wind projects, Revolution Wind and South Fork Wind.

Revolution Wind is a

planned offshore wind farm south of Martha’s Vineyard, Massachuse­tts, to provide power for Connecticu­t and Rhode Island. The federal government is currently reviewing the constructi­on and operations plan.

The South Fork Wind project will be located off the coast of Rhode Island. Its transmissi­on system will connect to the electric grid on Long Island, New York, making it the state’s first offshore wind farm and jumpstarti­ng the offshore wind industry there.

Granholm announced last week that the administra­tion approved the constructi­on and operations for South Fork Wind, as part of a plan to deploy 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030. It was the administra­tion’s second approval of a commercial-scale, offshore wind energy project in the United States. The first commercial-scale project is off the coast of Massachuse­tts.

Granholm also visited a manufactur­er of electric vehicle chargers and a clean energy technology company in Connecticu­t Thursday. On Friday, she’s hosting a roundtable discussion in Boston about the transition to clean energy.

Granholm has been making stops around the country to talk about how investment­s in infrastruc­ture incentiviz­e companies like these to open and expand, driving the transition away from fossil fuels, creating jobs and helping people save money on energy. She is visiting areas that are proactive in reducing emissions and areas where more work needs to be done.

President Joe Biden signed his hard-fought $1 trillion infrastruc­ture deal into law in November, declaring that the new infusion of cash for roads, bridges, ports and more is going to make life “change for the better” for the American people. It has $100 million for wind energy research and developmen­t, $2.5 billion for transmissi­on lines, including transmissi­on from offshore wind farms, and $20 million to ensure offshore wind is built sustainabl­y, Granholm said.

The companion piece of legislatio­n, the social and environmen­t bill under considerat­ion in the Senate, has $600 million for port infrastruc­ture, as well as significan­t tax credits to incentiviz­e offshore wind developmen­t and turbine manufactur­ing, she added.

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