EMAIL DETAILS
SUBJECT:
Re: Off-shore wind farms
PRI: NORMAL
FROM:
E
eschwerin@rosemontseneca.com
DATE:
2010-04-03 13:21:35
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<z2yae1fb75b1004030621u2e871c0an25d80cfe10dfb26@mail.gmail.com>
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TO:
A
Arlene Busch
<abusch@rosemontseneca.com>
N
Neil Callahan
<ncallahan@rosemontseneca.com>
CC:
D
darcher@rosemontseneca.com
H
hbiden@rosemontseneca.com
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Neil, I believe this is the Rhode Island project you were talking about that is backed by First Wind and DE Shaw. On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 9:10 AM, Arlene Busch <abusch@contegocapital.com>wrote: > In case you didn't see the NY Times article this morning. > > As New Englanders await a decision in Massachusetts on a bitterly contested > proposal to build the nation's first offshore wind farm, the State of Rhode > Island is forging ahead with its own project in the hope of outpacing - and > upstaging - its neighbor. > > Crucial to its strategy is dispelling worries that economics will trump the > environment, or the broader public good. > > Instead of having a private developer dominate the research on potential > sites, as Massachusetts has, Rhode Island embarked on a three-year > scientific study, to be completed in August, of all waters within 30 miles > of its coast. It has spent more than $8 million on research into bird > migration patterns, wildlife habitats, fish distribution, fishermen's needs > and areas that might be of cultural importance to Indian tribes. > > Its goal has been to head off the hurdles that have been in the way of the > Massachusetts project, which has pitted coastal Indian tribes, business > interest and homeowners against the developer, Cape Wind, and proponents of > alternative energy. Frustrated by the failure of the two sides to broker an > agreement, the Obama administration's interior secretary, Ken Salazar, has > promised to determine the fate of the project on his own this month. (On > Friday a federal historic panel sent Mr. Salazar its recommendation that the > government reject the Cape Wind Project.) > > "We took the opposite approach of what Cape Wind did," said Grover Fugate, > the chief administrator of the Rhode Island project and the director of the > state's Coastal Resources Management Council. > > Still, independent of the scientific study, Rhode Island has proposed two > potential offshore sites - a $200 million eight-turbine project off Block > Island, and a far bigger $1.5 billion farm in the eastern Rhode Island Sound > - and has selected a preferred developer, Deepwater Wind. > > In February, Gov. Donald L. Carcieri went so far as to suggest that the > Block Island site was "on target to become the nation's first offshore wind > farm." > > Massachusetts counters that it is much further ahead. "We've been through > all the state permits and we're awaiting the final permits," Ian Bowles, the > state's secretary of energy and environment, said in a recent interview. > > Rhode Island has not secured permits, but it has trumpeted what Cape Wind > so far lacks: a "power purchase" agreement with a utility company to buy > what a farm generates. Yet on Wednesday, the state's utility commission > rejected that pact, which involved the proposed farm off Block Island, as > too costly. > > So for now, Cape Wind is poised to be first, said Matt Kaplan, a wind > analyst at Emerging Energy Research, a firm that tracks emerging energy > markets. > > "If Cape Wind makes it through the permitting process, that is a major feat > that no other offshore wind project has achieved in the U.S.," he said. > "However, power purchase agreements have been hard to secure." > > Officials consider a viable project as a source of energy and jobs, but the > wind wars are also driven by state pride. "There is a rivalry to be the > first state to have an offshore wind project in the nation," Mr. Kaplan > said. "And there is some embarrassment on the part of Massachusetts, having > taken so long with Cape Wind." > > Delaware, Maine, New Jersey, New York and Virginia are also eager to secure > permits and to lease blocks from the federal government in waters beyond the > three-mile limit of state control. > > Some environmentalists are concerned that the offshore competition in the > Northeast could trump the protection of fish and bird populations, said > Jonathan Stone, the executive director of Save the Bay, an advocacy group > for Narragansett Bay. > > While environmental groups have generally praised Rhode Island's planning > as thorough, some question why state officials homed in on two sites before > the three-year study was completed. > > Mr. Fugate has emphasized that the sites are tentative and could be vetoed > if the research indicates that they have big drawbacks. Adjustments have > been made as the research has progressed, he said. > > "It is a matter of concern, but that's the answer they gave," said Trisha > Jedele, a lawyer for the Conservation Law Foundation, an advocacy group. > "And you continue to assess the data and stay vigilant and make sure that > ultimately that's what happens in the end." > > The economic stakes are considerable. Deepwater, the developer favored by > Rhode Island, says that the wind farm proposed in the sound could generate > 1.3 million megawatt hours of power a year, light up 125,000 homes and > create more than 600 jobs. > > The competition is so heated that Rhode Island officials have asked > researchers to keep some of their results secret. > > "I can't talk to some of my former graduate students because they work for > the State of Massachusetts," said John King, a geologist at the University > of Rhode Island who is working on the study. > > Yet in some ways, the scientists are embracing the competition, said Scott > McWilliams, a University of Rhode Island ecologist who has been using radar > to plot flight patterns of various birds in an effort to figure out how wind > farms might affect migrations and habitats. "There's definitely a rivalry in > getting something in the ground first." > > > > -------------------------- > Arlene R. Busch > 312.498.9595 Mobile > abusch@contegocapital.com > -- Eric D. Schwerin Rosemont Seneca Partners (202) 333-1880 eschwerin@rosemontseneca.co
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