Los Angeles Times

Long Beach port aims for huge wind turbine project by 2035

Floating structures could be towed to other sites to provide power for rest of state.

- By Noah Goldberg

Within about a dozen years, floating wind turbines — as tall as the Eiffel Tower — will stand alongside the cranes and cargo containers at the Port of Long Beach as part of the largest offshore wind turbine facility in any U.S. port.

Once assembled in the

Port of Long Beach, the 1,100-foot-tall turbines can be towed by sea to locations in Central and Northern California to generate renewable energy for the state.

The Port of Long Beach on Tuesday released plans for the offshore wind project — dubbed Pier Wind — to generate up to 20 megawatts of energy per turbine for the state, helping California move toward a zero-emission future.

“As society transition­s to clean energy, our harbor is ideally located for such an enterprise — with calm seas behind a federal breakwater, one of the deepest and widest channels in the U.S., direct access to the open ocean and no air height restrictio­ns,” Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero said in a statement. “No other location has the space to achieve the economies of scale needed to drive down the cost of energy for these huge turbines.”

The massive project would involve creating as much as 400 acres of new land for a terminal capable of handling heavylift crane operations and would cost nearly $5 billion, according to port officials. Constructi­on is more than three years out as local officials still need to plan with state and federal entities.

The wind turbine facility could be operationa­l by 2035, port officials said.

The 20 megawatts that each turbine can generate could produce all the 25 gigawatts of energy California hopes to generate via offshore wind by 2045 if the port is able to install between 1,000 and 1,600 of the turbines, according to a spokesman.

 ?? Port of Long Beach ?? AN ARTIST’S rendering shows Pier Wind, a turbine project that would involve creating as much as 400 acres of new land at the Port of Long Beach for a terminal. The facility would cost nearly $5 billion, officials said.
Port of Long Beach AN ARTIST’S rendering shows Pier Wind, a turbine project that would involve creating as much as 400 acres of new land at the Port of Long Beach for a terminal. The facility would cost nearly $5 billion, officials said.

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