Alboran Energy Strategy Consutlatns

North American right whales

  • Energy Musings, August 24, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

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    August 24, 2023

    Is National Fisheries Pissed At BOEM?

    The latest comment letter from the National Marine Fisheries Service to BOEM about the Beacon Wind offshore projects. NWFS has concerns with the plan and was sharply critical of the way BOEM has handled the agency’s prior comments and concerns. The gauntlet was thrown down with the warning that continued ignoring of NWFS concerns would lead to a rejection of a “no jeopardy” ruling that would derail the wind farm’s development. How much is the surge in whale deaths playing in this interagency dispute? Another dead whale washed ashore on Monday – now 66 since December 1, 2022. READ MORE

    Is National Fisheries Pissed At BOEM?

    We recently read the August 14, 2023, cover letter to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) from Michael Pentony, the Regional Administrator of the Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). NWFS is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The letter was in response to BOEM’s request for comments related to its Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the construction, operation, and decommissioning (COP) of Beacon Wind Energy LLC’s proposed wind energy facilities (Beacon Wind 1 and 2) off the coast of Massachusetts.

    Pentony wrote of his organization’s concerns with the plan and recommended approaches to help ease the regulatory process. The letter also contained criticisms of BOEM’s work, with NWFS’ sharpest rebuke in the opening paragraph of Appendix A attached to the letter. The critical comment reflects frustration with BOEM’s treatment of NWFS’ input to previous requests for comments about various offshore wind projects. Here is what NWFS wrote in that opening paragraph in a section headed “Purpose and Need.”

    “Since NMFS is an action agency and anticipating a request for incidental take authorization under the MMPA [Marine Mammal Protection Act], we need our Purpose and Need for the action to be clearly stated in the EIS. While BOEM did provide cooperating agencies an opportunity to coordinate on development of the Purpose and Need for the EIS before publication of the NOI, corrections provided by NMFS were not incorporated in the Purpose and Need statement included in the NOI. Some of the edits made by BOEM are additional deviations from previously agreed upon language. We recommend this be corrected in the DEIS [Draft Environmental Impact Statement] by incorporating previously provided revisions for Beacon Wind and following template language developed through extensive interagency cooperation in 2022, including for the NMFS-specific purpose and need.”

    Where does this frustration with BOEM come from? Most likely it began with the December 1, 2021, comment letter about the Mayflower Wind (now known as SouthCoast Wind) NOI to prepare an EIS. In those comments, NMFS discussed the speed with which BOEM was putting out requests for input and information about various offshore wind projects, which was not allowing adequate time for the agency to respond. Pentony wrote in his cover letter for NWFS’ comments on the SouthCoast Wind project:

    “The high number of projects moving through the NEPA [National Environmental Policy Act] process between now and 2024 makes it very difficult for us to provide the detailed level of review and interagency cooperation we have provided in the past. The extensive interagency cooperation we have invested with you to improve the NEPA documents for previous wind energy projects is no longer feasible, and we will be required to take a more limited Cooperating Agency role in the process.”

    So BOEM was working so fast that a key agency that advises on the maritime and fishing environmental risks of offshore wind couldn’t do its job properly. Is that like a doctor skipping an examination before telling you what you must do to cure an illness?

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

  • Energy Musings, August18, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

    Download the PDF

    August 18, 2023

    Offshore Wind’s Whale Problem Getting More Attention

    Thrown To The Wind, a documentary by Michael Shellenberger highlights the issue of underwater noise from offshore wind construction activity and its potential link to the surge in whale deaths. We are killing humpback whales at twice the rate for a sustainable population! READ MORE

    Canada’s Clean Energy Moves

    Two announcements in Ontario about building new nuclear power plants may eliminate the province’s long-term power projected shortfall. Our west, Eco-Refinery is planning to build a GTL plant producing clean diesel fuel that is better for the environment and diesel consumers. READ MORE

    New England Electricity Users Rest Easier – Should They?

    New electricity demand forecasts, plus more behind-the-meter solar and delayed power plant closures are giving ISO-NE officials greater comfort that winter blackout risk is reduced. READ MORE

    Offshore Wind’s Whale Problem Getting More Attention

    The rising number of dead whales washing ashore along the East Coast of America is drawing greater scrutiny. Michael Shellenberger, an author, former public relations official, and investigator of the Twitter Files, who now publishes a newsletter on Substack.com called Public News, has begun writing about the dead whale issue. More importantly, an organization he started, Environmental Progress, along with his newsletter has produced a 30-minute documentary on the issue of underwater noise from offshore wind construction activity and its possible impact on whales. The movie highlights how loud underwater noise may contribute to the recent surge in whale deaths despite the government’s denial of any linkage. It certainly demonstrates how uncomfortable the noise is for humans!

    Starting in 2017 and up to November 2022, North American right whales have been suffering from an “unusual mortality event” with nine whales dying from entanglement with fishing gear and 20 from injuries. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has noted that the recorded deaths represent only those known to the public because the carcasses washed ashore. Any whale dying offshore where the carcass sinks to the ocean floor remains unknown. We have no accurate whale death toll.

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

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