The Morning Call

When fighting climate change snags the catch of the day along the Jersey Shore

- By Wayne Parry

WILDWOOD, N.J. – Fishermen insisted Monday to a congressio­nal subcommitt­ee looking at offshore wind energy that they be consulted when crucial decisions are being made on the developmen­t of such projects, including where they are located and the level of access to the waters near them.

Fishermen should have been brought into the planning process from the start, Peter Hughes, of Atlantic Cape Fisheries, told U.S. House members from New Jersey and California who were holding a hearing at the Jersey Shore.

“Look at these slides,” he said, referring to diagrams of where proposed wind projects would be built. “They’re right smack dab where we are fishing. This is going to put people out of business.”

The purpose of the hearing was to gather input from the fishing industry and its advocates to be considered in future regulation of the nascent wind energy market. So far, a single five-turbine wind farm off Block Island, Rhode Island, is the only operating offshore wind farm in the U.S., but states up and down the East Coast are readying plans for similar projects.

Capt. Ed Yates, a fisherman from Barnegat Light, New Jersey, said flounder, cod and other species have moved away from undergroun­d cables at a wind project off Denmark.

“How does offshore wind energy affect the fishing industry?” he asked. “The answer we get from the wind operators is W` e won’t fully understand the impacts until the facilities are already built.“’

Frederick Zalcman, head of government affairs for Orsted, the European wind farm operator currently planning projects on the U.S. East Coast, said the company has met with fishing interests and will continue to do so.

Orsted recently changed plan specificat­ions in Massachuse­tts and New York, he said, “at considerab­le time and expense to the company” to address concerns from fishermen. They included reconfigur­ing the design of a Massachuse­tts plan to allow fishing boats to better maneuver around and between turbines, and changing the location where a power cable came ashore in New York.

As additional plans are developed, he said, “we will have to prove ourselves” in terms of listening to the fishing industry.

The Responsibl­e Offshore Developmen­t Alliance formed last year to represent the interests of the fishing industry regarding offshore wind. The group’s executive director, Annie Hawkins, said more scientific studies are needed, adding there has been virtually no public discussion of important questions like how wind energy projects would be dismantled after reaching the end of their lifespans.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP ?? The commercial fishing boat Ann Kathryn sails into the Manasquan Inlet in Manasquan, N.J. Although they support efforts to fight climate change and its impact on the world’s oceans, the fishing industry fears it could be harmed by offshore wind energy industry.
WAYNE PARRY/AP The commercial fishing boat Ann Kathryn sails into the Manasquan Inlet in Manasquan, N.J. Although they support efforts to fight climate change and its impact on the world’s oceans, the fishing industry fears it could be harmed by offshore wind energy industry.

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