In June the administration of Gov. Phil Murphy made a splash at the shore when the state board of public utilities approved a $1.6 billion wind farm 15 miles off the coast of Atlantic City.
Local environmental officials say the rippling waves of that announcement could soon be felt in the Bayshore region, with two additional rounds of wind farm application approvals to come in the next three years and a site situated near Sandy Hook and New York already eyed for development.
The first project in Murphyโs three-part plan to generate 3.5 gigawatts of wind energy by 2030 was awarded to the United States branch of รrsted, a Danish power company that proposed a 1.1 gigawatt project in Atlantic City waters. It is the largest offshore wind project ever awarded in the country. The next two projects call for even larger developments, soliciting 1.2 gigawatt constructions.
The lease on a Raritan Bay site was signed in March 2017 by the Norwegian organization Equinor, which proposes a pizza-slice-shaped wind farm on 80,000 acres of federal waters. The tip of the slice is located 19.5 miles off the coast of Sandy Hook and 14 miles away from Jones Inlet on Long Island.
If the proposal is adopted Equinor estimates construction will begin at some point between 2022 and 2023, with the first power available in 2024 or 2025. Estimates have the project powering 1 million New Jersey homes.
Clean Ocean Action executive director Cindy Zipf said Murphyโs goal is one worth pursuing, but only if projects in coastal waters are done responsibly.
โWe want to work toward ensuring while we move ahead with this industrial but green energy use, that itโs done with respect and protection to our ocean. We need to make sure that during the process that marine life is not compromised and the implementation is as green as possible. Where exactly will they be built? How will they be moved? What exactly will the impact be? These are things we need to know,โ Zipf said.
In a media release, the Murphy administration said the รrsted project, titled Ocean Wind, is expected to power an estimated 500,000 New Jersey homes and generate $1.17 billion in economic benefits, in addition to creating an estimated 15,000 jobs over the life of the project.
Murphy called the board of public utilities announcement โhistoricโ and said it will โrevolutionize the offshore wind industry in New Jersey and along the entire East Coast.โ
Through a recent announcement, Atlantic Highlands environmental commission chair Jim Krauss said he believes it was six years in the making.
Krauss said six years ago he and other environmental stewards, maritime professionals and recreational fishing leaders participated in a study led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory under an interagency agreement with the U.S. Department of the Interiorโs Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
โWe spent a day at Monmouth University explaining to these federal officials where people were fishing, sailing, surfing, etc.,โ Krauss said. โThey were trying to determine where they could put this wind farm so it wouldnโt conflict with any of the ocean users.โ
Krauss said the officials he spoke to were very concerned about projects negatively impacting the stateโs multibillion dollar tourism and commercial fishing industries.
โThey basically told us, โweโre not here to tell you where we think they could be placed, weโre here to find out from you where they shouldnโt be.โ It was encouraging to hear because weโve seen wind farms placed along fishing channels in Copenhagen and they can be a big annoyance,โ Krauss added.
Preceding this announcement was the May launch of the New Jersey Offshore Wind Supply Chain Registry, which allows companies, technical professionals and contractors to indicate their interest and offer their abilities to supply components and services for the offshore wind projects in New Jerseyโs coastal waters and along the entire Eastern Seaboard.
New Jersey Economic Development Agency CEO Tim Sullivan said the รrsted project and the creation of the registry โrepresent a major milestone toward our goal of becoming the capital of the American wind industry.โ
รrsted anticipates construction will begin in 2022 or 2023. The first power would be produced and circulated in 2024 in cooperation with PSEG Power.
โToday we have taken another important step forward into our 100 percent clean energy future,โ said Joseph L. Fiordaliso, NJBPU president. โWith todayโs award of 1,100 MW of offshore wind, a safer, healthier future for New Jersey is looking brighter and closer than ever.โ












