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Cape Wind, First U.S. Offshore Wind Farm, Building Plan Approved

By STEVE LeBLANC   04/19/11 12:18 PM ET   AP

BOSTON -- A federal agency approved a construction and operations plan for the Cape Wind project off the Massachusetts coast, clearing the way for work to begin on America's first offshore wind farm as early as this fall, U.S. Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar announced Tuesday.

Approval by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement was required before construction of the proposed 130-turbine wind farm in Nantucket Sound could get under way.

The secretary said the Cape Wind project, which has already received other state and federal permits, could create 600 to 1,000 jobs and that nationwide the wind power industry had the potential for tens of thousands of jobs.

"The wind potential off the Atlantic coast is staggering," but the vetting process for projects to tap it is too drawn out, Salazar said at a news conference in Boston.

"Taking 10 years to permit an offshore wind farm like Cape Wind is simply unacceptable," and the Obama administration is examining ways to streamline the permitting process so it won't take so long, Salazar said.

Yet Cape Wind itself still faces hurdles.

Opponents have filed nearly a dozen lawsuits saying the turbines could harm the pristine environment of Nantucket Sound.

"It's a national treasure that should not be industrialized," said Audra Parker of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, who attended the event in Boston.

Developers of the 468-megawatt project also are still shopping for a buyer for about half the power the turbines are expected to generate.

In a statement, Gov. Deval Patrick said federal approval of the construction and operations plan meant the state was one step closer to benefiting from the clean energy and jobs that Cape Wind will produce.

"States up and down the East Coast are now looking to Massachusetts with envy as we launch this brand new American industry," Patrick said.

In a separate announcement on Tuesday, the governor said his administration had requested that the federal government remove from consideration for wind farms offshore areas that have been identified by commercial fishermen and others as vital to the Massachusetts fishing industry.

A 2008 law requires Massachusetts utilities to obtain increasing amounts of renewable power and calls for 20 percent of their supply to be renewable power by 2025. The same law tries to make it easier for renewable projects to get financing by requiring utilities to seek long-term deals with them for at least 3 percent of their total demand.

Cape Wind opponents have argued that the project will pose an unnecessary burden for electric ratepayers.

The state's largest utility, National Grid, signed a deal with Cape Wind that the utility said will cost ratepayers $1.2 billion above the projected market price of comparable energy by the time it's done. Still, National Grid argues that the deal is a good price for the benefits it is receiving, including a uniquely large size for a renewable power project and proximity to an energy-hungry coast.

The state's other large utility, NStar, passed on Cape Wind, instead focusing on energy contracts with three smaller land wind farms that it said are a total of $111 million below market price.

The Cape Wind project will cost $2.62 billion to build, according an estimate from the Massachusetts attorney general's office. Developers say it will power 200,000 homes in average winds.

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BOSTON -- A federal agency approved a construction and operations plan for the Cape Wind project off the Massachusetts coast, clearing the way for work to begin on America's first offshore wind farm a...
BOSTON -- A federal agency approved a construction and operations plan for the Cape Wind project off the Massachusetts coast, clearing the way for work to begin on America's first offshore wind farm a...
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03:05 AM on 05/13/2011
Alright now!!!!
Bet it won't get completed without alot of bagger interference.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
05:54 PM on 05/08/2011
History International just had a program on for a wind farm in the gulf area. They take old abandoned oil drilling rigs and convert them into wind farms. The fun thing about these is that the central shaft rises and lowers and the blades fold up just like the blades of the V-22 Osprey so the Wind farm can survive a hurricane. The Oil Companies leave these old abandoned oil rigs in the gulf and this is a perfect use for them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adrian Zupp
http://adrianzupp.blogspot.com/
07:03 PM on 04/29/2011
This is the way we need to go on a grand scale.

My friend wrote this blog post on his work with biofuels:

http://adrianzupp.blogspot.com/2011/04/biofuels-viable-alternative.html
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vmf211
Fighting against Liberalism everyday
02:41 AM on 04/22/2011
I hope they build it right off all those rich Libs beach's in mass and conn.
They want them they should get them right in their back yards.
How's that green thing now elitist libs?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
05:55 PM on 05/08/2011
How is the fact that the Republicans are ALWAYS complaining about importing oil, but are the very first to block ANY type of Alternative energy.

How is being bought and paid for by the oil companies thing working out for YOU, CONman?
08:43 PM on 04/21/2011
I don't know enough about this topic but what kind of impact is there to the ocean floor and the habitats these turbines positioned into? Seems like you could disrupt some eco-systems.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
05:56 PM on 05/08/2011
actually they HELP the eco-systems. And surprising so does the Oil Drilling rigs. The fish life around an Oil rig is extensive, the smaller fish use the rigs as a place to hide and it creates its own eco system that goes a long way to help fish.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
06:54 PM on 04/21/2011
This is why the Green Movement in the US is an absolute joke... Here we have the ultimate clean energy project, the first of it's kind in the US, it doesn't take up space on land, it is not in a populated area, and there are still eco-freaks protesting it...
12:48 PM on 04/21/2011
Does anyone else think its odd that we want to subsidize clean energy to compete with subsidized unclean energy?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
05:58 PM on 05/08/2011
What is even more odd is the idea that we continue to subsidize unclean energy when they are the worlds and Histories most profitable businesses instead of subsidizing a Clean Energy Project. Maybe if we stop the subsidizes for Big Oil and the price of gas goes up, than maybe the people in the US will look to buy a car that gets 100 miles per gallon, instead of 100 miles per hour.
12:43 PM on 04/21/2011
Obviously the solution to our reliance on fossil fuels is to line the coast with windmills made almost entirely out of petroleum products.
05:19 AM on 04/21/2011
"why don't they build this offshore wind farm 15 to 20 miles from the coast away from the bird population and the beaches like in Scotland and other European countries ?"

Because in the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean, water is very deep 15-20 miles from the Coast.
In Europe, water in the North Sea (off Scotland, England, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands, Belgium,...) is only about 20-30 meters deep, 15-20 miles from the coast.
http://rpmedia.ask.com/ts?u=/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0a/Sund_mpazdziora.JPG/250px-Sund_mpazdziora.JPG
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
12:44 AM on 04/21/2011
Finally, NO reason for anyone to whine!
Oh, wait a minute, had the nimbyers and ole Ted been told to shut up 10 years ago, this new wind energy would have already been built and thus be cheaper!
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
12:54 AM on 04/21/2011
"Taking 10 years to permit an offshore wind farm like Cape Wind is simply unacceptable,"
So true!

We need to create a new law!
That RE be built here and afar...
One that will make me feel alright
When a nimby gets RE up his sight!
11:52 AM on 04/21/2011
Between Nimbys and downright misinformed ignorance it's amazing we have any alternative energy at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jenna Bean
Sock Monkeys!
04:41 PM on 04/20/2011
The irony!! All these regulations and barriers put in place for wind farms yet the oil companies just run amuck all over the earth with their big destructive toys.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theresa Allen
Nam Myoho Renge Kyo
03:00 PM on 04/20/2011
I think this is great idea. WE need to build this in the USA for jobs here and not oversea's. This would help us out in so many ways. Give the builder of the system tax break for starting it up and give the regular person a tax break or write off for putting them in their yard.
02:27 PM on 04/20/2011
Don't try putting them anywhere close to Nantucket Sound...Bobby Kennedy Jr will flog you with his eco-hypocrisy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
06:01 PM on 05/08/2011
get a clue, there are more Conservatives on Nantucket Sound who complained about a wind farm than there are Liberals. Isn't it funny how people LIKE YOU repeatedly pick out ONE SINGLE INDIVIDUAL because they are Liberals, yet it is usually the spoiled rich Republicans who block these things.
01:15 PM on 04/20/2011
I applaud this decision. It is a step in the right direction, but have you ever wondered why the world is so beholden to coal, oil, and natural gas? If you believe that we need these products to survive and that there are no other alternatives available for us to obtain the power necessary to run the world, then you have swallowed the propaganda put forth by the huge companies that control oil, gas and coal.

There are about 17,000 gas stations in America. Do you think the companies that own and supply those stations want a new, more efficient, less costly form of energy to be discovered? No way.

We, as an evolutionary human population, are on the verge of some great transformations, one of which will be the end of our enslavement to fossil fuels.
01:59 PM on 05/05/2011
those gas stations shouldn't have any problem selling biofuels.
they can change over to charging stations
they can sell tanks of hydrogen like propane is.
with the diversity of choices they are needed more than ever.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
06:05 PM on 05/08/2011
You are absolutely correct. Alternative energy is only one piece of the entire energy puzzle. We will never get rid of Oil, or Coal, or Nuke, but we can build up the other pieces of the puzzle.

If Reagan had not undone all the Tax Credits for Home Owners that Carter put in place for using Alternative Energy, we would see Solar and Wind Generators built in the USA instead of China and Vietnam. The Oil Companies and Energy Companies have blocked more attempts to convert to Alternative energy.

It took me over 2 years of law suits against a town in the Adirondacks to install a Wind Generator on property I have up there. They also tried blocking me installing an in ground Propane tank. Come to find out the Cousin of the Zoning Officer is a supervisor for National Grid, the energy provider for NY State.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrMandible
No one on the corner has a swagger like us.
10:01 AM on 04/20/2011
This will just lead to a huge wind spill that will damage the coastline for years to come.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dragontech
Looking for a good micro-bio
08:27 PM on 04/20/2011
Yeah and they'll have to pour tons of oxygen on the water to contain it,,,
F&F for the sarcasm. I think the group that is complaining that this'd hurt the ecology of the coast should be checked for funding from big oil. They are laughable and the suit should be thrown out for frivolous litigation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
06:06 PM on 05/08/2011
Sorry but we already have a large wind spill......Well actually its from the GOP Congress when they keep Breaking Wind with all their BS.

If this happens near me, I guess I will just break out a kite and enjoy it. The wind spill, and not the GOP Breaking Wind that is.