TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Two companies have won the right to
build windmills off the New Jersey coast to generate enough power for up to 1.2
million homes.
The U.S. Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management said the lease sales announced Monday will bring in nearly $2
million. The leased area runs roughly from Long Beach Island to the southern
tip of the state near Cape May and about 7 miles offshore at its closest point,
meaning the turbines would not be visible from the shore.
"Today's auction underscores the emerging market
demand for renewable energy and marks another major step in standing up a
sustainable offshore wind program for Atlantic coast communities," said
Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.
The federal agency previously awarded nine commercial
offshore wind leases, including projects off Rhode Island, Massachusetts,
Maryland and Virginia.
Environmentalists generally favor the proposals as they
would generate electricity without causing carbon pollution that contributes to
climate change. But some question the relatively close proximity to the
shoreline, which they say could interfere with migrating shorebirds.
Some recreational and commercial fishing groups also
worry about being banned from productive fishing grounds near the windmills
once they are built.
Several environmental groups said they were heartened by
the leases, even though New Jersey has yet to approve financing rules for
offshore wind.
"Gov. Christie signed a bill five years ago
greenlighting off-shore wind off the Jersey shore," said Doug O'Malley,
director of Environment New Jersey. "Today's auction is the best news for
off-shore wind in New Jersey since then. New Jersey has turned from a leader to
a laggard on offshore wind, and we're still waiting for off-shore wind rules
from the Board of Public Utilities. Our clean energy future is blowing in the
wind, and we need to harness it."
The companies that won the leases are RES America
Developments Inc. of Broomfield, Colorado, which bid $880,715 for 160,480
acres, and US Wind Inc. of Baltimore, which bid just over $1 million for
183,353 acres.
A third company, Fishermen's Energy, participated in the
auction but did not win. It is pursuing its own proposal to build windmills off
the coast of Atlantic City.
The initial leases run for one year to submit preliminary
plans. Once those plans are approved, the companies will have 4 1/2 years to
submit a construction and operations plan to the federal government.
The federal agency would then conduct an environmental
assessment with public input. If approved, the leases would run for 25 years.
Source: Philly.com
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