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NEW JERSEY: Pentagon Warns of Offshore Wind Projects, Van Drew Urges Moratorium

April 18, 2023 — In a potentially serious setback for offshore wind energy, the Pentagon is expressing concerns that wind farm projects along the East Coast could pose a threat to national security.

According to published reports, the Pentagon is troubled that the Biden administration has plans to expand offshore wind farm projects along the Atlantic coast, warning that nearly all of the new territory is in conflict with military operations. The areas of concern are off Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina.

U.S. Rep. Jeff Van Drew, whose district includes the shore towns of Atlantic and Cape May counties, has been one of the most outspoken opponents of offshore wind energy.

Van Drew pointed to the Pentagon’s concerns as another reason why a moratorium should be placed on wind farm projects until there is further study of the impacts.

Read the full article at OC NJ Daily

NEW JERSEY: Republicans seek moratorium on wind turbine mapping

April 13, 2023 — New Jersey Republicans are urging the state and federal government to put the brakes on sonar testing and wind turbine mapping in response to a surge in marine wildlife deaths off the coast.

A proposed resolution filed by members of the Senate’s GOP minority caucus calls on the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to impose a moratorium on offshore wind development studies.

The proposal comes in response to a rise in whale deaths on the eastern Atlantic coast, with newly released data showing nearly 40 whales, dolphins and porpoises have died along the New Jersey coast over the past year.

“After months of whales and dolphins washing up on our beaches, enough is enough,” said Sen. Declan O’Scanlon, R-Little Silver, one of the bill’s primary sponsors. “We cannot ignore the surge in marine life deaths that has occurred while offshore wind project preparation activities have been conducted along the coast.”

To be sure, there is no evidence that existing wind farm operations contributed to the recent whale deaths despite the claims by mayors and other New Jersey leaders.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says collisions with vessels are behind many of the whale deaths. Since 2016, there have been at least 184 “unusual” humpback whale deaths, many of them went to vessel strikes and fishing gear entanglements, the federal agency said.

Read the full article at The Center Square

New Jersey Republicans move to campaign on offshore wind

April 12, 2023 — New Jersey Republican state legislators have introduced measures calling for a moratorium on offshore wind development – challenging a keystone goal of Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, and riding a wave of opposition from local groups on the Jersey Shore.

Republican state Sens. Declan O’Scanlon and Ed Durr on April 11 introduced a resolution “urging the state and federal governments to place an immediate moratorium on all sonar testing and wind turbine mapping in response to the surge of unexplained marine wildlife deaths along the coast of New Jersey,” according to a statement from O’Scanlon.

A series of whale and dolphin strandings on New Jersey beaches since December brought pressure from offshore wind critics to bear on the Murphy administration and the federal Bureau of Offshore Energy Management and National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration.

The federal agencies say there is no evidence to support critics’ allegations that survey vessels working offshore wind projects had a role in the mammal deaths. Meanwhile Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., and other Republican members in the House of Representatives are pushing measures to delay wind projects and hold hearings on BOEM’s permitting process.

Read the full article at the National Fisherman

New Jersey: Wind Resistance

April 8, 2023 –Rich Baehrle, resplendent in a red, white and blue American flag button-down shirt, sported a black baseball cap emblazoned with the defiant Revolutionary War dictum: “Don’t tread on me.”

As he stood before a large crowd at the Ocean City Tabernacle, the real estate broker from Northfield poured out his grievances, delivered in a rapid, brusque manner through a thick Southern accent.

“I am against it! I’m not calling for a moratorium,” he thundered in the church building as if raging against sin, raising his hands while drawing loud applause. “It’s our coast! It’s our New Jersey! And we need to stop it now!”

It was not a religious service. Baehrle was railing at the wind.

In a raucous public meeting in March when residents and elected officials came out by the hundreds to declare their unwavering opposition to the proposed installation of hundreds of wind turbines off the Jersey Shore, Baehrle might have been preaching to the choir.

It was not just about ruining their ocean views. Some in the hall theorized the offshore platforms would haphazardly set off pacemakers. Others believed it was a national security risk, would brainwash children into the fruits of green energy, incur millions in future decommissioning costs and single-handedly dismantle local tourism. One speaker asserted, without substantiation, that the electricity from the wind turbines would all go to New York.

Further enflaming it all were the whales.

At least 31 whales and 25 dolphins have floated ashore up and down the East Coast since December and have become part of the fight, despite evidence that many of the marine mammals were most likely hit-and-run victims of increasingly larger cargo ships. And despite there being no wind farms in the ocean off the coast of Jersey just yet. In fact, there are only 7 wind turbines along the entire Eastern seaboard right now, off the coast of Block Island in Rhode Island and Virginia.\

Read the full article at NJ.com

NEW JERSEY: ‘Tell us why’: Monmouth Commissioners call for investigation into surge of whale deaths

April 8, 2023 — Monmouth County officials stood in the mist at Seven Presidents Oceanfront Park on Wednesday, where they gathered to call for an immediate stop to offshore wind energy work off New Jersey’s coast.

Their announcement marked a new addition to a growing group of elected officials who are demanding answers on recent deaths among whales and dolphins across the region, and who allege offshore wind survey work is the cause.

As of Wednesday afternoon, 10 whale deaths had been recorded along the Jersey Shore since Dec. 1. In addition, two separate pods of dolphins had stranded since early February on New Jersey beaches. Another three individual dead dolphins and one porpoise had washed ashore in separate strandings.

Read the full article at Daily Record

NEW JERSEY: NJ officials push again for wind energy stoppage

April 6, 2023 — There has to be something that’s contributing to a rash of marine mammal strandings along the New Jersey coastline, officials say. So, what is it?

County, state, and federal officials gathered in Long Branch on Wednesday to call for a pause of offshore wind activity, so that a comprehensive — and unbiased — investigation can be conducted into whether the going-green effort is contributing to the deaths of dozens of dolphins and several whales on New Jersey and New York beaches.

“It’s a simple equation — just stop, investigate, and tell us why,” Monmouth County Commissioner Thomas Arnone told a crowd at Seven Presidents Oceanfront Park.

For months, activists and officials have been pushing a not-yet-proven theory that preparation work to get wind turbines along the East Coast is interfering with the normal way of life for marine mammals, resulting in their death.

Environmentalists and New Jersey mayors have sent letters to President Joe Biden and Gov. Phil Murphy, asking for a halt to wind energy progress offshore, at least until it can be proven that acoustic surveys and other activity aren’t directly causing deadly harm to marine life. A moratorium has also been the focus of legislation on the federal level.

Read the full article at New Jersey 101.5

NOAA: NJ wind farm may ‘adversely affect,’ not kill whales

April 6, 2023 — New Jersey’s first offshore wind farm may “adversely affect” whales and other marine mammals, but its construction, operation and eventual dismantling will not seriously harm or kill them, a federal scientific agency said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued a report Tuesday evaluating an analysis by the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management of the Ocean Wind I project to be built off the southern New Jersey coast.

NOAA’s final biological opinion examined BOEM’s research, and took into account “the best scientific and commercial data available.”

NOAA determined the project by Danish wind power company Orsted “is likely to adversely affect, but is not likely to jeopardize, the continued existence of any species” of endangered whales, sea turtles and other animals. Nor is it likely to “destroy or adversely modify any designated critical habitat.”

Read the full article at Associated Press 

Massive study examines offshore wind’s impact on fishing, fisheries

April 5, 2023 — A just released “first of its kind” report that federal regulators and the fishing industry spent three years working on is making the rounds, exploring the impacts of offshore wind on fisheries and commercial fishermen, and identifying the questions that remain unanswered.

They just released their results in a nearly 400-page “Synthesis of Science” report — a collaborative effort between the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), the lead regulator of offshore wind; NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center; and the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance (RODA), a membership-based coalition of the fishing industry.

“I would say this [report] is the first of its kind,” said Fiona Hogan, one of the principal investigators and the research director for RODA. “It was kind of amazing … that we were able to get state and federal employees, academics, even from over in Europe … and the fishing industry directly working together to write this document.”

Read the full article at The New Bedford Light

NEW JERSEY: Van Drew hearing pushes back against offshore wind

April 2, 2o23 — Offshore wind came under congressional scrutiny March 16 when Rep. Jeff Van Drew hosted a field hearing in front of an overflow crowd at the Wildwood Convention Center.

Four Republican members of the House of Representatives heard from six experts, all of whom were critical of the offshore wind farms being developed in three lease areas off the New Jersey coast by the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) and the administration of Gov. Phil Murphy.

The hearing was an effort to “develop a legislative solution for the disruptive effect of offshore wind,” Van Drew said.

Marine mammal deaths continue to be the catalyst for offshore wind opposition. Since early December, nine whales have been found dead or dying on New Jersey beaches. Other cetaceans, including porpoises and dolphins, have also been washing ashore at an alarming rate. Counting eight dolphins that stranded on the Sea Isle City beach March 21, that number has reached a combined 23 dead porpoises and dolphins since December according to the Marine Mammal Stranding Center.

Although no official cause of death for the whales has been announced, concerns have been growing that they are connected to sonar mapping of the ocean floor being done in preparation for the construction of the Ocean Wind 1, Ocean Wind 2, and Atlantic Shores offshore wind projects.

Testimony by panelists depicted offshore wind as a threat to more than sea mammals. Tourism, commercial fishing, maritime safety and household budgets are all at risk, according to critics.

“If offshore wind industrialization moves forward, it will be the most profound transformation of the Atlantic coast in the history of the United States of America,” said Van Drew, who has introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives calling for a moratorium on offshore wind until answers to the whale death mystery can be found.

Rep. Chris Smith, from New Jersey’s 4th District (Monmouth and Ocean counties), has introduced a bill in the House seeking an investigation into the environmental approval process for offshore wind projects.

“Like the canary in the coal mine, the recent spate of tragic whale deaths has brought new light and increased scrutiny to the fast tracking of thousands of wind turbines off our coast,” Smith said. He called the wind farm approval process “shotty at best.”

Cindy Zipf, executive director of Clean Ocean Action, agreed that something isn’t right.

“This is too much too fast and in a word simply reckless,” Zipf said. “Marine life is being placed at grave risk without scientific due diligence monitoring and protection to ensure the ocean survives this massive industrialization.”

Despite the magnitude of New Jersey’s offshore wind program, the public, especially those from communities most directly affected, feel like they have no say according to Van Drew, who chaired the meeting.

“From communities to stakeholders, it is hard to find a group that feels as though their thoughts and suggestions have been properly examined and/or addressed by ocean wind companies,” the congressman said.

Van Drew said Orsted, the Danish company which is building Ocean Wind 1 and Ocean Wind 2, was given the opportunity to appear at the hearing, but declined, instead submitting a letter that alludes to what they have already put into the public record.

Read the full article at Shore Local News

Five US senators call for NOAA investigation into spike in whale deaths

April 2, 2023 — A group of Democratic U.S. senators from four states are pushing for NOAA to investigate a string of whale deaths along both coasts of the U.S. – including deaths that some in the fishing industry are attributing to work on offshore wind installations.

Numerous whale deaths have occurred off the U.S. East Coast in the last few months, with several whales washing up on the shores of the state of New Jersey. Seven dead humpback whales have already been discovered in 2023 off the coast of the state – a total higher than any full year since 2016.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

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