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February 02, 2022

King, Gulf of Maine Senators Urge Administration to Study Sustainable Offshore Wind Development

The Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire Senate delegations urge the Biden administration to properly asses the impacts of wind development

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Angus King (I-Maine) sent a letter to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) from the Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire Senate delegations seeking to ensure that offshore wind developments in the Gulf of Maine are pursued in a sustainable manner backed by “rigorous scientific research.” In the letter to BOEM Director Amanda Lefton, King and Senators Susan Collins (R-Maine), Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) highlight the significant potential for offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine, but stress that additional thorough research is needed to assess the impacts on local industries and ecosystems.

“As members of the Congressional delegations of Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, we write in support of critical baseline research and scientific studies to inform sustainable offshore wind development in the Gulf of Maine,” wrote the lawmakers. “We recognize the potential for our states to produce significant clean, renewable energy and to harbor a new industry and workforce through responsible development of offshore wind off our shores. Our state governments have already begun the process of engaging with a range of ocean users and leaders of the region’s fishing and marine industries in order to minimize conflicts with existing users and marine life. However, it is essential that BOEM do additional outreach and research to inform the agency’s planning process prior to conducting lease sales and to improve the ability to assess, predict, monitor, and manage potential environmental impacts of offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine.”

“Ongoing stakeholder engagement in New England has identified additional data gaps in the areas of socioeconomic and cumulative impact assessments of offshore wind development in the Gulf of Maine. As such, we support regionally specific research on the projected economic impacts of offshore wind to existing ocean users and an assessment of the data and approaches to evaluating the cumulative impacts of offshore wind in the region,” concluded the lawmakers. “As we work to advance offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine in a sustainable and fiscally responsible manner, BOEM’s efforts to bolster regional outreach and comprehensive wildlife and habitat data collection through the Environmental Studies Program with the best available science will be critical. We appreciate BOEM’s focus on the Gulf of Maine and look forward to continuing our close engagement with the agency as these studies are initiated in advance of expected lease sales.”

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In the letter, the Senators also voiced their strong support for the floating wind development research array backed by the University of Maine. 

“As part of developing the needed research and understanding the impacts of development, the State of Maine recently submitted a federal lease application to BOEM for a noncommercial small-scale research array using an innovative floating wind turbine designed at the University of Maine,” said the lawmakers. “We support Maine’s application for this research array and believe it would provide important and complementary data points to an Ecological Baseline Study and a comprehensive assessment of existing ecosystem data in the Gulf of Maine, all of which will help inform regional wind development potential.”

As a member of the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources (ENR) Committee and a founding member of the bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus, Senator King is a forceful advocate for sustainable clean energy solutions wherever they can be found. He introduced the Joint Long-Term Storage Act to speed up deployment of long-duration energy storage technologies through strategic collaboration between federal agencies that was signed into law last year, and cosponsored the Energy Storage Tax Incentive and Deployment Act, bipartisan legislation which would establish an investment tax credit (ITC) for business and home use of energy storage. In a hearing of the ENR Committee last year, King touted the opportunities of offshore wind to Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, and lauded the work being done on these technologies at the University of Maine.

You can read the full letter here or below.

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Dear Director Lefton,

As members of the Congressional delegations of Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, we write in support of critical baseline research and scientific studies to inform sustainable offshore wind development in the Gulf of Maine. For several years, we have remained engaged with those at the White House and at BOEM regarding the advancement of offshore wind energy opportunities. With Interior Secretary Deb Haaland’s recent announcement that BOEM plans to pursue offshore wind leases in the Gulf of Maine by mid-2024, we continue our engagement and reiterate our support for agency policy driven by rigorous scientific research.

We recognize the potential for our states to produce significant clean, renewable energy and to harbor a new industry and workforce through responsible development of offshore wind off our shores. Our state governments have already begun the process of engaging with a range of ocean users and leaders of the region’s fishing and marine industries in order to minimize conflicts with existing users and marine life. However, it is essential that BOEM do additional outreach and research to inform the agency’s planning process prior to conducting lease sales and to improve the ability to assess, predict, monitor, and manage potential environmental impacts of offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine.

The Office of Renewable Energy Programs has identified two studies on BOEM’s National Studies List for 2022 that we see as key:

(1) Ecological Baseline Study of the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf Off Maine (AT-22-12); and

(2) A Comprehensive Assessment of Existing Gulf of Maine Ecosystem Data and Identification of Data Gaps to Inform Future Research (AT-22-11).

In this next fiscal year, we urge you to invest in the Gulf of Maine through the development of an Ecological Baseline Study (AT-22-12) specifically to address limited regional bathymetric and benthic habitat data. Targeted benthic habitat surveys collected via high resolution multibeam mapping in addition to sediment sampling and benthic fauna characterization should be completed to create detailed sediment and habitat maps. These maps are essential to identifying habitat usage and distribution of a range of marine species, such as Atlantic cod and American lobster, whose complex habitats are critically important in the Gulf of Maine. As the Gulf has been designated as critical habitat for species like the North Atlantic Right Whale, we also suggest the commencement of comprehensive marine mammal and wildlife surveys and the collection of fisheries data in partnership with NOAA and state marine resource agencies to provide full color to an analysis of potential impacts from offshore wind development on New England fisheries.

Ongoing stakeholder engagement in New England has identified additional data gaps in the areas of socioeconomic and cumulative impact assessments of offshore wind development in the Gulf of Maine. As such, we support regionally specific research on the projected economic impacts of offshore wind to existing ocean users and an assessment of the data and approaches to evaluating the cumulative impacts of offshore wind in the region. As part of developing the needed research and understanding the impacts of development, the State of Maine recently submitted a federal lease application to BOEM for a noncommercial small-scale research array using an innovative floating wind turbine designed at the University of Maine. We support Maine’s application for this research array and believe it would provide important and complementary data points to an Ecological Baseline Study and a comprehensive assessment of existing ecosystem data in the Gulf of Maine, all of which will help inform regional wind development potential.

As we work to advance offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine in a sustainable and fiscally responsible manner, BOEM’s efforts to bolster regional outreach and comprehensive wildlife and habitat data collection through the Environmental Studies Program with the best available science will be critical. We appreciate BOEM’s focus on the Gulf of Maine and look forward to continuing our close engagement with the agency as these studies are initiated in advance of expected lease sales.

Sincerely,


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