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Energy Policy and New Jersey
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Upper Deerfield committee members join other local officials through NJ in opposing state green energy bill; may be too late
November 9, 2009 by Joe Green in New Jersey On-Line
November 9, 2009 by Joe Green in New Jersey On-Line
Township Committee members here hope someone can stop a state green energy bill now awaiting Governor Jon Corzine’s signature before it becomes law.
The New Jersey State League of Municipalities (NJSLOM) and officials in towns throughout the state joined them in opposing the bill, whose Senate version was S1303.
The bill passed the Senate in late February and the Assembly in late June.
DEP opposes wind farm in Del. Bay; Structures would be hazards to area's many birds, official says
September 2, 2009 by Daniel Walsh in Press of Atlantic City
September 2, 2009 by Daniel Walsh in Press of Atlantic City
State environmental officials oppose wind turbines anywhere in the Delaware Bay, a position that could jeopardize an Ocean County firm's plans for a wind park there.
The Department of Environmental Protection cited potential threats to migratory birds, oyster seed beds and other resources in an Aug. 20 letter to Delsea Energy, of Toms River. Scott Brubaker, the DEP's assistant commissioner for land use management, wrote "the Delaware Bay is not an appropriate area for development of wind energy."
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Studying the environment to prepare for offshore wind farms in New Jersey
August, 2009 in Coastal Services
August, 2009 in Coastal Services
As offshore wind farms in the U.S. move closer to becoming a reality, there are still questions about the potential environmental impacts and best sites for in-the-water wind turbines. Coastal resource managers in New Jersey are getting in front of this burgeoning business by conducting an environmental baseline study that will help guide wind farm development off that state's coastline.
Also filed under [
USA]
Warren County farmers, environmentalists clash over renewable energy legislation
May 3, 2009 by Bill Wichert in The Express-Times
May 3, 2009 by Bill Wichert in The Express-Times
The proposed bill includes safeguards to ensure agriculture is the primary source of income on farms, said New Jersey Farm Bureau President Richard Nieuwenhuis, of White Township.
Each acre of land devoted to renewable energy sources must correspond to 5 acres for agricultural or horticultural operations, according to the legislation. The State Agriculture Development Committee would have to sign off on the facilities on preserved farms, according to the legislation.
A clash of wind, wave energy permits off N.J.
April 4, 2009 by Sandy Bauers in Philadelphia Inquirer
April 4, 2009 by Sandy Bauers in Philadelphia Inquirer
The three New Jersey wind developers thought they had the whole deal locked up.
After years of study, the Board of Public Utilities had granted each of them not only its blessing, but $4 million apiece for more research.
But then, along came a Seattle businessman, and suddenly the ocean wasn't nearly big enough to hold them all.
New Jersey wants utilities to get 2 percent of their power supply from solar energy by 2020. Attempts to spur installations by homes and businesses through loans failed because of cost, Izzo said.
Public Service also is asking state officials to help win federal approval for a remote, offshore weather station near the site of a proposed 350-megawatt wind farm, Izzo said. The tower needs to be erected by August to begin collecting data this year, he said.
Wind power targets face high hurdles; State subsidy sought for offshore turbines
January 11, 2009 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press
January 11, 2009 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press
Gov. Jon S. Corzine wants New Jersey to become the offshore wind power capital of the U.S., but an array of financial, environmental and other hurdles lies in his path. ...Several environmental activists say Corzine's 2012 target may be unrealistic.
Also filed under [
General]
N.J. environment's defenders uneasy; List of threats keeps growing
December 29, 2008 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press.
December 29, 2008 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press.
The industrialization of the ocean, coastal overdevelopment, contaminated sites and global warming will be among the top environmental issues in the Garden State next year, observers said.
"What we're seeing is a gold rush toward energy development in the ocean," said Tim Dillingham, executive director of the American Littoral Society, a Sandy Hook-based coastal conservation coalition.
"We gotta take better care of the coast," he said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape]
The two most popular projects in New Jersey - solar panel installations and more recently, wind farms - are expensive even with government incentives, some of which are being pulled back. ...Executives at Garden State Offshore Wind said they would probably have a hard time securing the $1.1 billion needed to build New Jersey's first 96 wind turbines. Environmental studies and regulatory hurdles will push off a huge capital expenditure by 18 months, company executives said.
How do the winds blow off the Jersey Shore?
The state may offer up to $12 million in rebates for companies to find out, using offshore weather stations.
Activists who want more environmental studies questioned whether that's the best way to spend the taxpayers' money, but a wind company spokeswoman supported the rebate idea.
Lance Miller, chief of policy and planning at the state Board of Public Utilities, which is steering the energy plan's implementation, agrees that the scope and scale of some of its objectives are unprecedented. Principally, these are the massive scale of energy audits planned for buildings, finding ways to finance the improvements needed in those buildings to cut energy use and getting utilities to buy into a plan where there is less demand for their power.
"New Jersey is the first to do [energy audits] on such a big scale," Miller said of the inspection plan, which will cover 3.7 million buildings, of which 3.2 million are residential. At an average annual clip of 300,000 building inspections, Miller estimates the task would run through 2020.
Deepwater utility group wins New Jersey offshore wind bid
October 3, 2008 by Craig Rubens in earth2tech
October 3, 2008 by Craig Rubens in earth2tech
New Jersey is one step closer to bringing an offshore wind farm to the coasts of the U.S. Garden State Offshore Energy (GSOE), a joint venture between utility Public Service Enterprise Group (PSEG) Renewable Generation and Deepwater Wind, was selected by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities today to build an offshore wind farm far off the Jersey coastline. The proposed 350-megawatt wind farm would consist of 96 turbines nearly 20 miles offshore. GSOE will receive a $4 million state grant to help cover permitting costs and spur project financing though the final project, to be completed by 2012, will likely cost well over $1 billion, according to the state.
Also filed under [
General]
Delays in offshore windmill project blasted
August 17, 2008 by Angela Delli Santi in New Jersey Herald
August 17, 2008 by Angela Delli Santi in New Jersey Herald
When then-Gov. Richard Codey signed an executive order paving the way for New Jersey's first offshore wind farm in 2005, he didn't imagine it would take so long to get turbines spinning off the coast.
The Board of Public Utilities now estimates the earliest date for the pilot project to be generating electricity from windmills off Atlantic City is late in 2012. ...Lance Miller, chief of policy and planning for the BPU, said projects of this magnitude take time. He defended the BPU's diligence in selecting the best proposal.
Recommendations delayed on wind turbine proposals
August 2, 2008 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press
August 2, 2008 by Todd B. Bates in Asbury Park Press
A state panel evaluating proposals for an offshore wind turbine pilot project will have until Oct. 2 instead of Aug. 20 to make a recommendation to the state Board of Public Utilities.
The panel needs more time to evaluate five companies' proposals, some of which are "large, extensive," Doyal H. Siddell, a BPU spokesman, said Thursday.
But the six-week delay did not sit well with two observers.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Meanwhile, three companies have proposed building liquefied natural gas facilities miles off the Jersey Shore.
Excalibur Energy (USA) Inc. wants to construct a deep-water pipeline system for natural gas about 15 miles off Asbury Park.
Atlantic Sea Island Group wants to build an island for an LNG facility 19 miles from Sea Bright, while ExxonMobil has plans for a floating LNG terminal about 20 miles from Manasquan.
In addition, five companies are competing for up to $19 million in state funding to build a potential wind turbine project in an area from Seaside Park to Stone Harbor that is up to 23 miles offshore.
State officials are evaluating whether offshore LNG facilities and wind turbines will be part of New Jersey's overall energy plan, Corzine said. ...But when it comes to offshore wind, "the cart is put well before the horse" because environmental studies have not been done and federal rules have yet to be approved, said Cindy Zipf, executive director of Clean Ocean Action.
NJ weighs bill encouraging alternative farm energy
June 16, 2008 by Tom Hester Jr. in Associated Press
June 16, 2008 by Tom Hester Jr. in Associated Press
New Jersey lawmakers are contemplating a bill that defines solar and wind energy generation as agricultural activity. The measure aims to promote alternative energy sources, but has been criticized as a possible danger to farmland preservation efforts.
The bill would allow the owners of preserved farmland to construct, operate and install solar or wind energy facilities or equipment on their farms. The generated power could be used to operate the farm or be sold to a utility company.
The law also would protect solar and wind power generation on farms from nuisance complaints from neighbors, similar to protections farmers have from complaints about the smell of manure, for instance.
Fish Juice: N.J. Fisherman angling to develop offshore wind
June 3, 2008 by Jeffrey Ball in Wall Street Journal
June 3, 2008 by Jeffrey Ball in Wall Street Journal
File this one under if you can't beat ‘em, join ‘em.
A group of commercial fishermen wants to get in on the rush to build offshore wind farms to generate electricity. It's an interesting about face for the fishing industry, which has traditionally fought offshore industrialization - other than their own floating seafood factories, that is. ...The effort is attracting attention in New Jersey, where the state is looking to provide grants for a pilot offshore wind farm. ...
Meanwhile, if Trenton doesn't take the bait, perhaps Providence will. Last Friday, Fishermen's Energy filed one of seven proposals to build a windfarm off the coast of Rhode Island.
Also filed under [
Rhode Island]
How much will it cost you? Many think state's energy master plan won't ease electric bills
April 18, 2008 by Tom Johnson in Newhouse News Service
April 18, 2008 by Tom Johnson in Newhouse News Service
The Corzine administration unveiled its long-awaited energy master plan yesterday, a blueprint that calls for dramatic changes in the state's energy policies but concludes there is no silver bullet to ensure the state maintains a reliable and affordable source of electric power.
It calls for more wind farms and a more aggressive effort to install solar panels on homes, businesses and government buildings. It recommends sharply curbing energy consumption through a variety of means, from putting up buildings that use less energy to installing so-called smart meters to help residents better manage energy use and cut their bills. And it suggests another nuclear power plant ought to be seriously considered.
What it does not promise is to rein in runaway electric rates.
New Jersey energy plan sees renewables, nukes
April 18, 2008 by Tony Gnoffo in Philadelphia Inquirer
April 18, 2008 by Tony Gnoffo in Philadelphia Inquirer
By 2020, solar panels could be commonplace in New Jersey, wind turbines should be spinning offshore, and new nuclear cooling towers might rise in Salem County.
That is the vision contained in the first draft of a state Energy Master Plan offered yesterday by Gov. Corzine.
New Jersey also should be using about 20 percent less electricity by then, even though demand is currently growing more than 1.5 percent per year, the plan concludes. ..."One of the most important things in this plan is the recognition that even if all the efficiency, conservation and renewable-energy programs are a success, there will still be a . . . shortfall in the amount of energy necessary," said Steven Goldenberg, a Fox Rothschild L.L.P. lawyer who represents the New Jersey Large Energy Users Coalition. That group includes 25 of the state's biggest energy consumers.
N.J. utility weighs offshore wind farm; Bids may complicate similar plan in Del.
March 5, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
March 5, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
New Jersey's largest power supplier is competing with Bluewater Wind and a group of commercial fishing companies for the right to build a wind farm off the coast of the Garden State.
PSEG announced this week that its renewable generation division, and a partner company, Winergy Power Holdings, has bid to build a 96-turbine wind farm off the coast of Cape May and Atlantic counties. The company said it would be 16 miles offshore. ...The results of the bidding competition could have implications for the proposed wind farm off the Delaware coast. Bluewater proposed building a regional hub for offshore wind turbine construction in Delaware, but if a different company wins the New Jersey bidding, the hub may lose out on that business.
Also filed under [
Delaware]
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