New US offshore wind chief regulator Klein 'aggressively optimistic' despite backlash
Recently installed director of Bureau of Ocean Energy Management insists sector's future bright despite challenges ranging from permitting to whale strandings
Klein said the administration feels a sense of urgency to address the climate crisis and views offshore wind development as a “key tool to move towards sustainable, cleaner, more secure energy sources”.
Headwinds
Klein said there is no data suggesting that the recent whale beachings have any connection specifically to offshore wind activities but acknowledged that “as projects become more real in certain places, there are communities that have legitimate questions about what this means for impacts to ocean resources” and existing ocean users.
"Getting some of these projects, approved and constructed, I think will ameliorate a lot of the concerns that folks have," she said, adding that overcoming public concerns will entail “making sure that we're providing adequate information”.
“When provided with accurate, data driven information, facts and science, we know that communities tend to respond in a favourable way.”
“You can be concerned about something but also understand that the scope of the risk is such that the development activity is still worth moving forward,” she added.
Smart from the Start
A long-term Department of Interior (DoI) employee who worked in the administration of Barack Obama as the regulatory framework for the industry was set up, Klein said “I had a pretty good sort of 101 of the programme and how it began.”
Offshore wind development was initially authorised by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 but got its boost from a regulatory standpoint in 2011, with the establishment of the ‘Smart from the Start policy’.
Smart from the Start policy entails “the government proactively taking a role in identifying places that seem well suited for in this case offshore wind development” while avoiding stakeholder conflicts, Klein explained.
Opposite to standard practice for offshore oil & gas lease sales, offshore wind leases only face a full environmental impact statement upon submission of construction and operations plan by a developer.
Permitting delays
Eliminating redundancies in the process is key, said Klein, noting that along with BOEM multiple agencies are involved in environmental reviews, including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Environment Protection Agency, and the US Army Corps of Engineers.
The federal government is working to make sure “there's one environmental review done that can satisfy the needs of multiple action agencies”, she said.
Another is rebuilding capacity in human resources, as the rate of workers quitting the federal government increased by nearly a quarter since the pandemic began.
“There have been efforts to really build that capacity back up and make sure that there are enough people to do the work,” she said.
To increase the bureau's capacity and streamline permitting, Biden’s 2024 budget seeks to raise BOEM’s renewable energy budget by 25%, to $64.5m, while providing an additional $60m to partner agency NOAA “to expand offshore wind permitting activities”, according to a White House press release.
The National Marine Fisheries Service under NOAA monitors coastal environments and plays a critical role in the permitting process.
Finally, she looks to the industry to ensure that the government has timely and sufficient information early to evaluate projects to make "the whole process considerably smoother,” she said.
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