Exiting Biden launches environmental review of CIP's New York Bight offshore wind project
Danish developer's US subsidiary Vineyard Offshore has pitched 1.3GW of the array as Excelsior Wind into New York's latest tender
In one of the last likely moves in offshore wind by outgoing President Joe Biden’s administration, federal regulators initiated the environmental review of Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP)’s Vineyard Mid-Atlantic project in the New York Bight.
“Our environmental reviews are essential for helping us identify, evaluate, and address the possible impacts of our renewable energy efforts on other uses of the offshore environment and marine ecosystems,” said Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) director Elizabeth Klein.
BOEM regulates federal coastal energy development in the US under the Department of the Interior.
The lease is located around 20 miles (32 km) south of Long Island, New York, and 36 miles east of New Jersey. The project's construction and operations plan include up to 117 wind turbines, enough to power more than 700,000 homes, with two export cables that would make landfall at Rockaway Beach, Atlantic Beach, or Jones Beach, New York.
The NOI comes less than a week before vehement sector critic Donald Trump is inaugurated as US president.
“President Trump is committed to stopping these harmful projects and is taking decisive action,” Van Drew said in a press statement.
This is the 14th EIS initiated under the Biden administration, which has resulted in 12 project approvals totalling nearly 20GW.
One project, Orsted’s 132MW South Fork array to New York, has been completed, while three others are in construction.
These include the 800MW Vineyard Wind to Massachusetts owned in a joint venture by CIP with Iberdrola-controlled Avangrid.
Orsted’s 704MW Revolution Wind split between Connecticut and Rhode Island, as well as Dominion Energy’s 2.6GW Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind, are also in offshore installation.
Industry experts expect that capacity already being installed would largely be immune from a Trump moratorium, but it remains unclear how it would affect projects that haven't started construction.
A moratorium could also have cascading effects for future projects and lease sales as well as supply chain investment.
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