US to offer wind power site lease on East Coast
TRENTON, N.J. – The federal government will lease an area larger than half the size of Rhode Island off New Jersey’s and New York’s coasts for wind power development, the first offshore lease in the Biden administration, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced Wednesday.
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management auction of nearly 500,000 acres is planned for next month and covers parcels off the so-called New York Bight. It could lead to enough energy production to power up to 2 million homes, according to the Interior Department.
The announcement comes as President Joe Biden’s administration aims to reach 30 gigawatts of offshore wind production by 2030, with much of it expected to come from New Jersey and New York. The project announced Wednesday could account for up to 7 gigawatts, the department said.
Haaland announced the lease on a call, joined by Democratic Govs. Phil
Murphy of New Jersey and Kathy Hochul of New York as well as AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. The project gives the country a chance to fight climate change and create “good-paying, union jobs,” Haaland said.
“We are at an inflection point for domestic offshore wind energy development. We must seize this moment – and we must do it together,” she added.
The decision to move forward with the lease comes after stakeholders,
including commercial fisheries, weighed in and resulted in a reduction of the size of the lease area by 72%, according to the department.
The closest distance to New Jersey among the parcels is 27 nautical miles offshore, while the nearest to New York is 20 nautical miles away, according to the bureau.
The project carries several stipulations, including the requirement of project labor agreements and planned incentives for using components like blades, turbines and foundations made in the United States.
The project is the first lease under Biden’s administration, but other offshore wind projects had been approved earlier, including an 800-megawatt project off Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, and a 130-megawatt project off Rhode Island and New York.
The auction is set for Feb. 23, with a public hearing about the proposal set for Jan. 19.