EDITION: U.S.
 
CONNECT    

Offshore Wind Power Could Replace Most Coal Plants In US, Says Salazar

WAYNE PARRY   04/ 6/09 10:45 PM ET   AP

Ken Salazar

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — If wind power were fully developed off the East Coast, windmills could generate enough electricity to replace most, if not all, the coal-fired power plants in the United States, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said Monday.

But those numbers were challenged as "overly optimistic" by a coal industry group, which noted that half the nation's electricity currently comes from coal-fired power plants.

The secretary spoke at a public hearing in Atlantic City on how the nation's offshore areas can be tapped to meet America's energy needs.

"The idea that wind energy has the potential to replace most of our coal-burning power today is a very real possibility," he said. "It is not technology that is pie-in-the sky; it is here and now."

A spokesman for Salazar said Monday evening that the secretary does not expect wind power to be fully developed, but was speaking of its total potential if it were.

Offshore energy production, however, might not be limited to wind power, Salazar said. A moratorium on offshore oil drilling has expired, and President Barack Obama and Congress must decide whether to allow drilling off the East Coast.

"We know there are some people who want us to close the door on that," he said. "We need to look at all forms of energy as we move forward into a new energy frontier."

Salazar said ocean winds along the East Coast can generate 1 million megawatts of power, roughly the equivalent of 3,000 medium-sized coal-fired power plants, or nearly five times the number of coal plants now operating in the United States, according to the Energy Department.

Salazar could not estimate how many windmills might be needed to generate 1 million megawatts of power, saying it would depend on their size and how far from the coast they were located.

Mark Rodgers, a spokesman for Cape Wind, which wants to build a wind farm off Cape Cod, Mass., estimates it would take hundreds of thousands of windmills. The average wind turbine today generates 2 to 5 megawatts per unit, he said.

"It would take a number of years to build out, but we've got to get going in this country with the first few projects," he said.

Jason Hayes, a spokesman for the American Coal Council, said he was puzzled by Salazar's projections. He said wind power plants face roadblocks including local opposition, concerns about their impact on wildlife, and problems in efficiently transmitting power from far offshore.

"It really is a stretch," he said of Salazar's estimate. "How you put that many new (wind) plants up, especially in deep water, is confusing. Even if you could do what he said, you still need to deal with the fact that the best wind plants generate power about 30 percent of the time. There's got to be something to back that up."

Monday's hearing was hosted by Salazar and was the first of four to be held around the country to discuss how energy resources including oil, gas, wind and waves should be utilized as the new administration formulates its energy policy. It was held at the Atlantic City Convention Center, whose roof-mounted solar energy panels are the largest in the nation.

In 2007, the Outer Continental Shelf, a zone extending roughly three to 200 miles from shore, accounted for 14 percent of the nation's natural gas production, and 27 percent of its oil production.

Salazar said it is essential that the nation fully exploit renewable energy resources to reduce its reliance on imported oil.

By buying oil from countries hostile to the United States, "we have, in my opinion, been funding both sides in the war on terrorism," he said.

Environmentalists are urging the Obama administration to bar oil and gas drilling off the East Coast, and invest heavily in wind, solar and other energy technology.

"This is a defining moment, whether we're going to have a clean energy future or continue to rely on oil drilling," said Jeff Tittel, New Jersey director of the Sierra Club. "Right now the government is fossil-foolish, and we need to change that."

But Skip Hobbs, a petroleum geologist from New Canaan, Conn., said oil and gas drilling has been shown to be safe.

"We should recognize that as a practical matter, fossil fuel will rule for another generation," he said.

New Jersey is tripling the amount of wind power it plans to use by 2020 to 3,000 megawatts, or 13 percent of New Jersey's total energy. In October, Garden State Offshore Energy, a joint venture of PSE&G Renewable Generation and Deepwater Wind, was chosen to build a $1 billion, 345 megawatt wind farm in the ocean about 16 miles southeast of Atlantic City.

In Atlantic City, the local utilities authority has a wind farm consisting of five windmills that generate 7.5 megawatts, enough energy to power approximately 2,500 homes.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — If wind power were fully developed off the East Coast, windmills could generate enough electricity to replace most, if not all, the coal-fired power plants in the United St...
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — If wind power were fully developed off the East Coast, windmills could generate enough electricity to replace most, if not all, the coal-fired power plants in the United St...
Filed by Dave Burdick  | 
 
  • Comments
  • 55
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
03:15 PM on 04/08/2009
Senator Kennedy will never allow it.
02:06 PM on 04/08/2009
This is great news, although we should expect powerful fossil fuel interests to fight it. The good news is that fossil fuels aren't the only energy sources that have a friend in Washington these days.

I think solar is going to surpass wind eventually­, since it has even more room for efficiency improvemen­ts, but in the meantime, we can gradually replace most new power generation and old coal plants with offshore and land wind power.
photo
frankcaprafan
The waist is a terrible thing to mind.
02:48 AM on 04/08/2009
The coal and oil industry paramilita­ry will destroy it before it is up and running.
09:00 PM on 04/07/2009
Replace coal when? 2050? How much? Trillions? Wait till our utility and gas prices put us into the hole. We really need this bogus global warming hoax crap about now.
photo
Lemmy
There Are Americans, then there are Liberals . .
04:53 PM on 04/08/2009
It's the practicali­ty part that these global warming loons just don't get.
08:06 PM on 04/07/2009
The great conservati­ve meltdown of 2009. The greatest show on earth!
05:44 PM on 04/07/2009
What I hate seeing in the continuing monologue of the fossil fuel industry is this insistence to continue things as normal. I am not alone on this; millions of Americans and probably BILLIONS of people now recognize a need for fundamenta­l change away from fossil fuels.

Yet, at the end of this article, a petroleum geologist has argued that oil drilling is safe: "We should recognize that as a practical matter, fossil fuel will rule for another generation­." Fossil Fuel will Rule for another Generation­.

Of course it will, that goes without saying!! But by saying it, you are TRYING to imply that that Rule will continue beyond that generation­! Fossil fuel will REMAIN for another Generation­, but this generation IS the one which sees that depart. CONTINUING fossil fuel developmen­t is not the way to see it depart.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joewalters
11:24 AM on 04/08/2009
If we stay the course either one of two things will happen:

1) Over a billion people that live by the ocean and large bodies of water will be displaced.

2) Or we will simply run out and unprepared for alternativ­e sources, creating MASSIVE global economic and commerce crisis. Even if people don't believe in Global warming, they are living in a dream world if they don't think this won't happen.
02:57 PM on 04/07/2009
Well we dont need huge electric lines going to Ohio so they can close down coal plants.
Ohio needs natural gas fired plants to replace the coal fired ones.

http://www­.peaceteam­.net/actio­n/pnum959.­php
12:38 PM on 04/07/2009
I must admit that I had my doubts about Salazar as Secretary of the Interior, but so far he is looking
pretty good. I wish him luck.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
11:56 AM on 04/07/2009
When the power of the waves and the tides is finally tapped, it will become the dominant power source along the worlds coastal regions.
11:50 AM on 04/07/2009
We need to mine more coal. Coal is the answer for the next 25 year.
12:47 PM on 04/07/2009
Not the most brilliant statement ever made on HuffPo.
photo
FormerReaganite
Government Regulations Save Lives
01:03 PM on 04/07/2009
Are you a coal miner?
11:19 AM on 04/07/2009
I don't endorse off-shore drilling, but if it can be used as a springboar­d to build off-shore wind, i.e., central spots around which to build wind turbines with oil taxes going toward building more turbines, then I think we need to consider the potential. If it is planned properly, wind around oil could be a good transitory movement that leaves us with wind turbines long after the oil rigs are abandoned and perhaps provide a future foundation for tidal power or off-shore solar. If Salazar shows us a plan that hits those points, I'll get behind it.
10:26 AM on 04/07/2009
are ya listening there Ted , Duke of Chappaquid­ic , Kennedy
10:20 AM on 04/07/2009
"But Skip Hobbs, a petroleum geologist from New Canaan, Conn., said oil and gas drilling has been shown to be safe"

No bias there.
09:45 AM on 04/07/2009
Why do all these government employees come out and announce these over the top future potentials for one form of renewable after another. Yes, offshore wind is going to play a role, but its not going to eliminate the need for every other kind of energy production­.

When is Salazar, Jackson, Pickens, Gore and the rest of them going to discuss the more feasible future of energy production which will include a mix of renewables that can be ramped up over the next two decades.

Lets stop the "big statement" speeches that seem so self-servi­ng and actually start some discussion about how fossil fuels can begin to be phased out over time.

http://www­.mygreensc­ene.com

Renewable Energy Jobs/ Business Opportunit­ies/ Education/ Investment­s/Events
photo
FormerReaganite
Government Regulations Save Lives
01:07 PM on 04/07/2009
Somehow the myth of "clean" coal must be destroyed.

And yes, all energy will not come from one source; it never has.
photo
LeaderofMen
Bilingual former US Marine.
08:50 AM on 04/07/2009
Of course a coal industry spokesman would be the naysayer.

If anyone listens to the man, they're part of the problem, too