Donald Trumped | US offshore wind joy as House backs end to southeast project ban
House of Representatives would rescind Trump-era ban on offshore energy development in the southeast Atlantic, with bill heading to the Senate
House bill 7900, the National Defence Authorisation Act of 2023, passed on Thursday, would: “Restore[s] the Department of Interior's authority to hold offshore wind lease sales in federal waters off the coasts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, while leaving the leasing moratorium in place in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico at the request of the Department of Defense.”
The defence bill is still under consideration by the Senate with no guarantee that the language removing the ban will remain in the final bill, however.
BOEM sits under the Department of Interior and is the federal regulator of energy development on the outer continental shelf (OCS).
“American Clean Power applauds the passage of the bipartisan amendment,” said Heather Zichal, CEO of industry advocacy group the American Clean Power Association.
Although Trump issued the moratorium as an executive order, which typically could be rescinded by further executive action by the next president, a judge ruled in a separate case that the language under which offshore wind development is authorised, the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA). The OCSLA allows the president to remove areas of the OCS from consideration for energy development, but not rescind bans once they are in effect, and only an act of Congress can rescind the moratorium.
While the industry has long sought the elimination of the ban, it remains unclear how much impact it would have on the overall US picture.
Governor Cooper’s offshore wind target is not a legal mandate, however, and the state lacks a clear pathway to market, and while Avangrid-owned Kitty Hawk is slated to receive federal approval next year, the project still remains without offtake. Bets are that it will sell its power to Virginia, which has a legal requirement for 5.2GW of offshore wind capacity by 2035.
Georgia and Florida have not expressed any interest in offshore wind development.
The region is also less attractive than the windier coastlines of the US northeast, with lower wind speeds, softer soils making for costlier installation, and frequent hurricanes that require more robust turbines.
BOEM recently unveiled plans to establish up to 11 wind energy areas with as much as 16GW of potential in the 30-million-acre Gulf of Mexico call area stretching from Louisiana to the Texas-Mexico border.
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