Mid-Atlantic
Governors
Commit to
Offshore
Wind Energy
By CATHERINE
KRIKSTAN
Capital News
Service
ANNAPOLIS (Nov. 12, 2009) ---- The governors of Maryland, Virginia and
Delaware
agreed
Tuesday to a
partnership
to encourage
the
deployment
of offshore
wind energy
in the
region,
hoping to
capitalize
on the
Mid-Atlantic's
enormous
offshore
wind
resources.
Govs.
Martin
O'Malley,
Tim Kaine
and Jack
Markell's
agreement
aims to
generate
clean,
renewable
energy and
green jobs.
"Today
marks
another
important
step towards
a clean
energy
future for
our families
and workers.
The
opportunity
for
renewable
energy
generation
through
offshore
wind is
outstanding,"
said
O'Malley, in
a prepared
statement.
"This
collaboration
will allow
us to take
full
advantage of
these
opportunities
and pool our
collective
abilities
for ... a
cleaner and
more
sustainable
region,"
O'Malley
said.
The
measure aims
to outline
methods of
offshore
energy
transmission
and
encourage
market
demand for
this
untapped
resource, as
well as
pursue
federal
policies
that would
advance
offshore
wind in the
region.
Generating
energy from
offshore
wind
turbines
would bring
Maryland
closer to
accomplishing
the
governor's
aggressive
environmental
initiatives,
which
include a
commitment
to producing
20 percent
of the
state's
energy from
renewable
sources by
2022.
"Maryland
is a
relatively
small state
in a global
marketplace
in respect
to offshore
wind. So
we're trying
to work with
our
neighboring
states to
brand the
Mid-Atlantic
as the
premiere
offshore
wind
market,"
said Malcolm
Woolf,
director of
the Maryland
Energy
Administration.
"There is
a very, very
clear line
of very,
very strong
winds --
stronger
than in the
Midwest --
right off
our coast,
going from
North
Carolina all
the way up
the
Northeast,"
said Ross
Tyler, clean
energy
director at
the Maryland
Energy
Administration.
Maryland
has a number
of available
alternative
energy
resources.
"But we
don't have
enormous
amounts of
space. And
really, in
order for us
to meet the
goal of 20
percent by
2022, the
other new
technology
that we can
bring into
the equation
is offshore
wind," Tyler
said.
There are
currently no
offshore
wind
turbines
operating in
the United
States, so
these states
expect to
face
challenges.
"We're
doing
something
for the
first time,
which raises
a whole host
of hurdles
that you've
got to jump
over," Woolf
said.
These
hurdles
include
determining
how to lease
offshore
federal
land, how to
transmit
energy from
offshore
turbines to
onshore load
centers and
who will
fund this
transmission
process.
The
states will
also have to
confront the
not-in-my-backyard
outcries and
environmental
concerns
that often
accompany
discussions
of wind
energy.
Ocean
City
residents
have balked
at the
impact that
offshore
wind
turbines
might have
on their
ocean views,
even though
these
turbines "on
the clearest
of all days
... may
appear as a
slight
toothpick on
the
horizon,"
Woolf said.
Elsewhere,
including
Western
Maryland,
environmental
activists
have raised
concern over
the risk
that
spinning
turbine
blades pose
to birds and
bats.
But the
Maryland
Energy
Administration
promises "to
address
local
concerns.
So, for
example, if
the folks in
Ocean City
decide that
they don't
want
offshore
wind, we can
focus
developers'
interests in
places where
there is
greater
community
acceptance"
of wind
energy,
Woolf said.
The
administration
also pledges
"great
sensitivity
to the
environment,
both above
the water
and below
the water,"
said Tyler.
Mike
Tidwell,
director of
the
Chesapeake
Climate
Action
Network,
called the
tri-state
agreement
"an exciting
partnership
among three
states with
enormous
clean energy
potential."
"But
there's a
lot of
additional
work to be
done,"
Tidwell
said. "We
need more
than just a
memorandum
of
understanding.
We need
actual
policies in
these states
... that
provide the
kind of
support and
level
playing
field that
has been
enjoyed by
dirty energy
for
decades."
Just one
offshore
wind energy
project has
been
approved in
Delaware.
None have
been
approved in
Maryland or
Virginia.
"We're
still trying
to attract
the
developers
and we're
several
years away
from
actually
having any
wind
turbines
spinning"
offshore,
Woolf said.
But these
three states
now have "a
much bigger
voice in
Washington,
to make sure
that
offshore
wind is not
ignored,"
said Woolf. |