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Showing posts with label DeepCwind Consortium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DeepCwind Consortium. Show all posts

Jul 30, 2024

DeepCwind Consortium Website 2010 to 2015


DeepCwind Consortium   Its evolution 2010 - 2015 

Scroll down to  enjoy the evolution of the consortium's website www.deepcwind.org/   
from its first  known version June 11, 2010 to its final version May 2, 2015.   
Courtesy of the Internet Archive

Reading through around thirty versions lets one learn a great deal about  how the Consortium grew and evolved  under the leadership of  the University of Maine's  Jake Ward & Habib Dagher, 
From their June 2010 version  below comes this summation: 
"In 2009, the Department of Energy granted the University of Maine $7.1 million over the course of two years to launch the DeepCwind Consortium National Research Program. The primary objectives are to:

Validate floating platform models for deepwater offshore wind turbines.
* Optimize floating platform designs by integrating more durable, lighter, hybrid composite materials.
* Estimate the cost of energy for deepwater offshore wind technologies.
* Compare the benefits and costs of composite materials to conventional materials in deepwater offshore wind manufacturing, design, and construction
.

The Final archived version May 2, 2015    Celebrates the anchoring of their  1/8 sized prototype  of their floating windturbine adjacent to Castine in upper Penobscot Bay.                  

============================================ 
 2010 websites

 June 11, 2010

July 28, 2010

Sept 1, 2010

Dec 27, 2010

Dec 30, 2010

2011 websites

Feb 3, 2011

Feb 26, 2011

July 25. 2011

Aug 8, 2011

Aug 11, 2011

Aug 14, 2011

Aug 28, 2011

Sept 2 2011

Sept 6 2011  (pdf)

Oct 6, 2011

Nov 6, 2011

Dec 7, 2011

2012 websites

  Jan 6. 2012

Mar 10, 2012

Mar 15, 2012

May 29, 2012

2013 websites

May 31. 2013

June 29, 2013

July 28, 2013

Sept 15, 2013

Oct 23, 2013

Nov 26, 2013


2014 websites

2015  websites
May 2, 2015       FINAL ARCHIVED ENTRY 


Mar 31, 2012

DeepCwind Consortium poised to deploy America's first floating offshore windturbine

There are now two separate offshore windpower proposals off Maine: the DeepCwind Consortium led by the University of Maine, and Hywind-Maine, a project of Norwegian energy giant Statoil. 


Beginning this spring, the island's artifice-free natural scenery off its southern rim at Lobster Cove will be joined for about 5 months a year by an experimental deepwater wind power test center where the 1/3 size prototypes will be tested.

DeepCwind's engineering teams are poised to set out up to three prototype floating windturbines in waters two miles south of America's oldest art colony, the famed painters' isle Monhegan, off Maine's Midcoast. 

The first deployment is not expected to yield any electricity to consumers on Monhegan or elsewhere; its purpose is to test the structural and functional integrity of the floating ocean wind turbines, which is composed of thousands of parts, all of which must work under the stresses and rigors of the Gulf of Maine.

DeepCwind was joined earlier this winter by Norwegian energy giant Statoil, which has declared interest in setting out its own prototype floating deepwater turbine in waters 12 miles northeast of Portland.  

DeepCwind is apparently seeking a site at least 20 miles offshore for deployment of its full sized windturbines.  DeepCwind leader Habib Dagher holds that such distant deployment will markedly reduce the turbines' scenic impact - a concern raised by the state's profitable coastal tourism industry coastal resorts. 

Dagher has also noted that turbines-to-shore cable technology has improved to such an extent that the greater distance from shore will not result in a significant loss of power delivery.  Stay tuned.

Jul 18, 2011

Saving the Gulf of Maine by simply Standing


In Huber v. BPL, I challenged the state decision to let the University site its offshore wind test center off Monhegan's Lobster Cove. Against the strenuous opposition of the State and University of Maine, Judge Jeffrey Hjelm ruled that   Ron Huber indeed posessed the lawful standing and right as party to bring his case against the DeepCwind siting decision.

From:  Knox Superior Court
CIVIL ACTION Docket No. AP-10-2   ORDER ON APPEAL.       Link to the complete decision
Decision filed June 27, 2011


Ronald C. Huber,
Plaintiff.
v.
Maine Department of Conservation
Bureau of Parks and Lands,
Defendant

Pursuant to 5 M.R.S. §§ 11001—11008 and M.R.Civ.P. 80C, plaintiff Ronald C. Huber appeals from a decision issued by the Bureau of Parks and Lands, Department of Conservation  (Department), acting under the authority of 12 M.R.S. § 1868 (2010), identifying a site approximately two miles south and seaward of Monhegan Island as one of three offshore wind energy test areas and as the Maine Offshore Wind Energy Research Center. Huber’s appeal is opposed by the Department and by The University of Maine System, which appears here as an intervenor based upon its role as the lead member of DeepCwind Consortium. The Consortium, a public-private partnership that has already secured federal funding for the project, intends to apply for a permit in order to develop the Monhegan site.
 
For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that Huber has standing to appeal the Department’s decision, because the statutory characterization of the agency action must be seen to allow him to pursue a challenge even at this early stage of the prospective development. The court concludes, however, that the Department’s decision is supported by the evidence and is not otherwise unlawful.

------snip------

Standing and Party Status
The court will address Huber’s standing first because the existence of standing is a threshold issue and a predicate to the consideration of the merits of his appeal.
A. Standing
As applied to state court proceedings in Maine, the notion of standing is prudential and rests on the expectation that the parties who are "best suited to raise a particular claim" are those who should be entitled to promote or oppose that claim in court. R00p v. BeUast, 2007 ME 32, jl 7, 915 A.2d 966, 968 (citation and internal punctuation omitted). Therefore, "Maine courts are only open to those who meet this basic requirement." Lindemann v. C0mm’n on Governmental Ethics and Election Practices, 2008 ME 187, jl 8, 961 A.2d 538, 541 (citation and internal punctuation omitted).

7 The petitioner objects to the assignment of a "‘Low Quality’ viewshed rating" for the Monhegan site. The court construes this as a reference to the Department’s assessment of a "low" level of concern about the effect of the test area on the Monhegan viewshed. R. 80.

Page 8

As a general matter, the determination of standing is not subject to a specific formula. Roop, 2007 ME 32, p7, 915 A.2d at 968. However, in appeals from agency action, the right to seek review is governed by statute. Lindemann, 2008 ME 187, p 9, 961 A.2d at 542. The Legislature has characterized an administrative identification of an "offshore wind energy test area" as "final agency action." See 12 M.R.S. § 1686(4). The course of Huber’s appeal is therefore governed by the provisions of 5 M.R.S. § 11001 et seq. which provides the exclusive method for judicial review of "final agency action." Lingley v. Maine Workman's Compensation Bd 2003, A.2d 327, 330. Huber’s standing to obtain judicial review of the Department’s decision therefore depends on whether he has standing under these procedural statutes.

As described in his brief on appeal, Huber’s involvement with the Penobscot Bay area, including Monhegan Island, is long—standing. He notes that he has workedsince 1993 to protect the environment and the wild inhabitants of Penobscot Bay, motivated by a sense of spiritual obligation. He refers to his involvement in litigation from 1994 through 1996 as head of a non-governmental organization and related to construction on coastal Ducktrap Mountain in Northport. He asserts that in the mid-1990’s, he participated in the DEP’s oil tanker and oil port rules task force, which was involved in the development of rules to protect marine life from oil spills. Huber states that he was involved in additional DEP proceedings in 1998 and 2006 because of a proposed development’s potential harm to aquatic environment, ecology and scenic resources. In 2005 and 2006, he headed a citizens’ group that worked with the DEP on matters relating to the environmental effects of cement dust piles.

In addition to his history of environmental advocacy, Huber writes that he has a specific connection to Monhegan Island, which he visits and enjoys while pursuing his faith—based stewardship of the entire Penobscot Bay region. While on Monhegan Island, Huber uses the pedestrian trail to get to Lobster Cove, where he appreciates the "complex and unspoiled vista" of the gulf of Maine. He is one of many ornithologists who travel from all over the world to observe the birds and other wildlife on Monhegan Island. See also R. 65.

Pursuant to section 11001(1), "any person who is aggrieved by final agency action shall be entitled to judicial review thereof in the Superior Court in the manner provided by this subchapter? The record must therefore establish that Huber has been "aggrieved" in a way that is sufficient to give him standing to pursue this appeal. Further, Huber also must show that he was a party during the underlying administrative proceeding. See, e. g., Friends 0f Lincoln Lakes

Page 9

v. Town of Lincoln, 2010 ME 78,1111, 2 A.3d 284, 288; Lindemann, 2008 ME 187,j] 17 n. 9, 961 A.2d at 543-44; Hammond Lumber C0. v. Fin. Auth. ofMe., 521 A.2d 283, 286 n.5 (Me. 1987). Here, the court first considers whether the record shows that Huber has party status from the agency level, and it next addresses the sufficiency of his alleged injury as an element of standing.

(1) Party status
The Law Court has "interpreted the term party broadly so as to mean any participant in the proceedings who is aggrieved by the action or inaction of the zoning board of appeals." Norris Family Assocs., LLC v. Town ofPhippsburg, 2005 ME 102, il 16, 879 A.2d 1007, 1012 (emphasis in original; citation and internal punctuation omitted).8 See also In re Lappie, 377 A.2d 441, 443 (Me. 1977) (". . .the legislative rationale is that one who is adversely affected by the entry of an administrative order, whether a formal party to the administrative proceeding or A not, is more likely to be aware of the details of the administrative proceeding than are members of the public generally. Such persons are more likely to seek judicial review to assure that the administrative body acts consistently with the standards prescribed by the statute."). The Court has recognized that administrative proceedings are conducted less formally than judicial proceedings, and so “an appellant need not have formally appeared as a party as long as it participated throughout the process." Lincoln Lakes, 2010 ME 78, {1 12, 2 A.3d at 288. Thus, to qualify as a party, the person’s participation in the administrative process may be "formal or informa1." Norris Family Assocs., 2005 ME 102, 11 16, 879 A.2d at 1013 (citation and internal punctuation omitted).

Here, the Department suggests that Huber attended one of its public meetings.9 (Br. of Resp. at 13.) This is a sufficient acknowledgement to support this element of Huber’s standing claim.

8 Cases such as Norris Family Associates that address appeals from municipal boards include discussions of the concept of “party status." That principle has the same purpose as it carries in the context of appeals pursued under the Administrative Procedure Act, and so the court considers the former cases in analyzing this part of the standing issue in this action.

9 The University argues that the record does not reveal any participation by Huber in the  administrative proceeding. Because the Department takes a contrary position, the court decides the issue favorably to Huber.

Page 10

Beyond this suggestion that Huber was a participant in the agency’s process, the record also reveals that concerns generally echoing those that Huber advances here were raised at the Rockport public meeting held in September 2009. R. 132-37.10   Several written comments, which are not attributed to named persons, mirror Huber’s arguments about the effect of the test area on Monhegan’s unique scenic assets. R. 272-73. One letter in particular focuses on the visual impact of wind energy development on the southern end of Monhegan Island, which is the location of Lobster Cove — a prime focus of Huber’s claims here. R. 288.

This demonstrates that Huber apparently attended a public meeting and that during the course of the administrative process, the concerns he raises here were brought to the agency’s attention. The court finds that this combination of circumstances is a sufficient basis on which toview Huber as a party participant.

(2) Particularized injury
To complete a demonstration that he has standing, Huber must also show that the agency’s action has caused him particularized injury —- "that is, if the agency action operated prejudicially and directly upon the party’s property, pecuniary or personal r ghts." Nelson v.Bayroot, LLC, 2008 ME 91,j]10, 953 A.2d 378, 382. See also 5 M.R.S. § 8002(4) ("‘Final agency action’ means a decision by an agency which affects the legal rights, duties or privileges of specific persons, which is dispositive of all issues, legal and factual, and for which no further recourse, appeal or review is provided within the agency ."‘). This requires consideration of whether Huber has suffered a legally recognized injury and whether any such injury is a particularized one.

First, Huber contends that he has sustained damage because of the prospects of development to a site that holds particular aesthetic and religious meaning to him.“ The University argues that Huber has not been injured by the mere designation of a location as an  offshore wind energy test area and as the Maine Offshore Wind Energy Research Center. No  actual development has occurred yet in the designated offshore wind energy test area and 10. The record does not reveal who was present at that hearing, R. 130, or at the October 2009 meeting held on Monhegan Island itself, R. 162-64. Huber was not among those who received public notice by mail of the Monhegan Island meeting. R. 266-71.

11. Huber also claims that his injury encompasses changes to ocean currents and resulting damage to an animal population over which he claims to exercise a faith—based stewardship. The record, however, does not demonstrate a factual basis for this type of alleged injury.

Page 11

research center, and none will occur absent a permit issued under 38 M.R.S. § 480-HH. Until the Department issues a permit, the locations at issue will not change, and Huber’s interests in those  locations are unaffected in fact.

But for the provisions of section 1868(4), the University’s analysis might well carry the day. An injury sufficient to confer standing on a claimant must be more than abstract. Nelson, 2008 ME 91, 11 10, 953 A.2d at 382. And the harm claimed by Huber is presently little more than that. However, in section l868(4), the Legislature has deemed that “[t]he identification of an offshore wind energy test area or areas under subsection 1 or subsection 3 constitutes final agency action." This statute has significance in two ways. First, because the Legislature has established that the type of administrative determination at issue here is "final agency action," it has also established that this type of action "affects the legal rights, duties or privileges of specific persons. . ." because that is the very definition of "final agency action." This syllogism therefore demonstrates that despite the absence of any actual physical development - and even though the state has not even issued a permit that would authorize such development, the Legislature has deemed that the very designation of an offshore wind energy test area results in an injury sufficient to meet the standard that is part of the criterion of "final agency action."12

The second consequence of section 1868(4) is that because the type of action taken thus far by Department is deemed to be “final agency action ," if Huber or others similarly situated to him were precluded from seeking judicial review, he (and they) would be permanently barred from doing so. Huber is now deemed to have been injured by the mere identification of a location as a test area, because the Legislature has declared that such an identification is "final agency action," meaning that by definition it has affected ‘his rights. lf, as the University argues, Huber has no appellate recourse based on that agency action, he would be left without a remedy notwithstanding that legally acknowledged injury

----------------------------------------------------------
12.  One of the University’s arguments challenging Huber’s standing is that he has not demonstrated that his religious interests would be affected by the Department’s actions. The court need not and does not reach this issue for two reasons. First, as is discussed in the text, the statutory characterization of the Department’s action as "fina1 agency action" supports the notion that that action causes harm to a claimant. Second, harm to aesthetic interests, if particularized, is a sufficient foundation to establish standing. Fitzgerald, 385 A.2d, 189, 196-97 (Me. 1978).

Therefore, even without regard to Huber’s contention that the state action affects his religious interests, the action’s impact on his aesthetic interests is a proper basis to grant him standing.

Page 12

Thus, because of the effect of section 1868(4), the court concludes that Huber has
sustained a legally cognizable injury. The next question is whether that injury is a particularized
one.

An injury is "particularized" if it is "distinct from any experienced by the public at large and must be more than an abstract injury." Id. This standard applies to claims based on an alleged injury to public rights, including rights associated with public places. See Friends of  Lincoln Lakes, 2010 ME 78, jj 14, 2 A.3d at 289; Fitzgerald v. Baxter State Park Auth., 385 A.2dat 196-97.

In the context of this case, the court draws guidance from the Law Court’s analysis of the nature of a "particularized injury" as discussed in Nergaard v. Town of Westport Island, 2009 ME 56, 973 A.2d 735. There, the Court rejected a claim of standing by two people who were among more than 1,600 residents who would drive past a challenged development. The Court held that their injury would not be particularized because of the large number of people who would be similarly affected. ld., jj 20, 973 A.2d at 741. The Nergaard Court distinguished that universe of affected people from the one examined in Fitzgerald. In the latter case, standing was conferred on a group of five people who used Baxter State Park and who sought to challenge agency action affecting their aesthetic interests in the park. Because of the small size of that affected group of “actual users," the Court held that they were not members of the "general public" and that the harm they alleged in fact was "particularized." 385 A.2d at 196-97, discussed in Nergaard, 2009 ME 56 p 21, 973 A.2d at 741.

Like the Fitzgerald plaintiffs, Huber’s injury is distinct from that suffered by the public at large because he is an actual user of Monhegan Island, particularly Lobster Cove, which is the area from which the wind energy research test site will be visible and which holds particular aesthetic and spiritual significance for him. The record therefore demonstrates that the agency action at issue here has injured Huber and that his injury is particularized. When those conclusions are combined with his status as a party to the administrative proceedings, his demonstration of standing is complete. The court now addresses the merits of his appeal from that final agency action.


B. Merits of the Huber’s claims on appeal

Page 13
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

End of Excerpt from
CIVIL ACTION Docket No. AP-10-2   ORDER ON APPEAL.

Jul 15, 2011

Island Institute Offshore Wind Exploitation webinar 7/7/11 AUDIO recordings.

The meeting was organized by Island Institute. Speakers included Heather Deese, Ph.D., II Director of Marine Programs, Amanda LaBelle, II Marine Programs Associate, Suzanne Pude II Community Energy Director, & Birgitta Polson, II Community Energy Fellow. Matt Nixon from Maine State Planning office also spoke..  See Power Point Slides from the Webinar. 
 
AUDIO
* Welcome to meeting. 4 minutes 10 seconds

* Heather Dietz, Intro part 1. 3 minutes Describes Island Institute Concern over threat of energy costs for islands drives them. Research tech Outreach. Stance of offshore wind energy supportive. apprriately siteds and where local benefits aligned with local costs.

* Heather Dietz, Part 2. 2 minutes Describes offshore wind energy Maine motivations is that water is quite deep. Strength of wind and proximity to major load centers. High level interest and support funding from feds. Concern is high dependence on fossil fuel Vulnerable. And have strong wind.

* Heather Dietz, Part 3. 2 minutes Maine has 5 gigawatt goal by 2030 = 3% of national energy development. Also other uses of electricity. Very early stages One full scale one existing StatOil has the Hywind floating wind turbine10 miles off Norway. And U Maine has its plan.

* Heather Dietz Part 4. 2min 4 seconds Current status of state. Governor's ocean energy task Force. LD 1810 ocean wind legislation and 25 mw pilot project green ocean energy

* Heather Dietz reads UMaine official Jake Ward's 2 memos. 5 minutes Maine's 5 GW by 2030 plan. DeepCwind tech update UMaine offshore wind lab.

* Matt Nixon, GIS expert, State Planning Office. 5 minutes

*Question and Answer period 1. 5 minutes. Maine compared to other states? More action south of Cape Cod. Because pole tech is old tech. 800 ocean windmills are seafloor mounted off Europe. Siting within ten miles of Monhegan - become precedent?  

Answer. Two siting locations within state waters: 1. a process that would allow for permit application in state waters, and (2) the experimental prototypes. (3) Commercial sized incentivizing development offshore would be ten miles out. Subsidized longterm rate at which electricity would be purchased is being considered by PUC power [FIGURE 22A]. Outside that the pilot 25 megawatt project would be considered by PUC whether off Monhegan, off Matinicus or off Portland would be up to the specific interest of developers putting in proposals.

* Q&A on undersea cables and corridors. 5 min 
Will they be sent directly to Boston by undersea cable.Or Maine?

* Heather Dietz on outreach to fishers and NGOs

* Amanda LaBelle & Suzanne Pude on coming events. 11 min. August 11th film and discussion, "On the Horizon" at The Strand Theatre in Rockland. September 15: Island Institute hosts "Sites and Sounds of Offshore Wind Energy" In Oct November "Wind Turbines on Land and Sea"

* Alan Round of Gulf of ME Research Institute on Spatial Data. 4 minutes

* Role of Maine SeaGrant. 2 min 40 sec Discussion of Seagrant's role in offshore wind energy development: outreach re DeepCwind in an ongoing series of "grange hall" style informal conversations with coastal communities. [Note poll on how well the webinar went.]

* BOEMRE and offshore sites update. 2min13sec
 
* Local Benefits

* Entire Webinar audio Click here. 77minutes

Jun 28, 2011

DeepCwind Consortium: a Pyrrhic victory?

DeepCwind ruling by Maine Superior Court a  “Pyrrhic Victory” for University of Maine-led industrial consortium - critic.
 
ROCKLAND  In a historic precedent for defense of Maine’s natural  marine resources, the Knox Superior Court has ruled that Maine citizens have the lawful right to sue on behalf of wildlife in the Gulf of Maine.  Read the decision here

“Until now, the courts have rejected efforts by individuals to obtain legal standing to represent non human entities. “ Huber said.  “ Justice Hjelm’s decision, while it allows development of the DeepCwind offshore wind energy test center, also levels the playing field for citizens trying to protect Natural Maine in the face of powerful industrial consortium like DeepCwind. Both in Superior Court and other venues."

Huber was philosophic about the outcome. “We’ve lost one fight here, but the cost to DeepCwind  and other would-be Gulf of Maine ocean energy developers is an end to the ban on citizen representation of wild nature in Maine and the Gulf of Maine,"   Huber said he is exploring his options.

Huber said it reminded him of the tale of King Pyrrhus of Epirus
"One more such victory" fretted the King, following a costly battle with the Romans "would utterly undo him.” ….
“Likewise for the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands,”  Huber said. “They and the DeepCwind Consortium collectively defied their own natural scientists and oceanographers in order to rush through the permitting of an offshore windpower test center two miles off Monhegan Island.  And while Judge Hjelm had little choice but to defer to the agency for making an ”informed decision,” Huber said, “the justice also signaled his suspicion of the agency’s methods by ensuring that citizens can lawfully challenge efforts by both the DeepCwind Consortium and other big industrial concerns to go around the laws and regulations protecting our irreplaceable natural Gulf of Maine.”

For  a copy of the court’s  decision, Click Here   For more information about the case Click Here


END

Jun 10, 2011

Penobscot Bay Watch to US DOE on DeepCwind - It's the Maine Coastal Current & the Lobster larvae

This was set in slightly modified form to Laura Margason, US Dept of Energy on June 9, 2011.

RE: DOE/EA 1792 University of Maine’s Deepwater Offshore Floating Wind Turbine Testing and Demonstration Project,  Gulf of Maine  (108  page PDF)

Dear Ms. Margason,


We are writing in response to the draft Environmental Assessment  for Project DOE/EA 1792, released by the Department of Energy.

Penobscot Bay Watch sent scoping comments to the DOE in October 2010, noting concerns over the limited scope of review proposed, which excluded the reasonably foreseeable offsite indirect and secondary impacts that would flow out from the University's proposed activity, if the impacts to larger oceanic processes of the Gulf of Maine did occur as a result of development and deployment of the planned sequence of full scale floating wind turbines - the entire raison d'etre for the University's project.


The University seems content to  hold that there is no necessity to consider any impacts  beyond such immediate and short term impacts to resources they have identified as being within the footprint and viewshed of the proposed  marine windpower research center.


However this causes the Environmental assessment to be inadequate because it fails to address the most important , most fundamental questions raised by the proposal: what are the likely climate changing effects of interfering with the Eastern Maine Coastal Current's flow and flow rate by positioning windmills, as planned, within its pathway in the Gulf of Maine?

 

The state has identified as appropriate several locations in the Gulf of Maine for utility scale wind development. The preferred alternative lies within the EMCC just prior to where bathymetric conditions stimulate a segment of it to break off  (and deliver lobster larvae to Penobscot Bay).


It does not pass the straight face test for the University of Maine to pretend that the completely predictable impacts of  the utility scale ocean windfarms it proposes to build following and based on preparation of these prototypes need not be considered at this stage. It is to feign that there is no possible connection between the prototype and the full scale device that is the reason for building the prototype.


This is untenable. The Department of Energy need to work with the University of Maine to develop either a supplemental Environmental Assessment or an Environmental Impact Statement to deal with the predictable and connected offsite and indirect and cumulative impacts stemming from the proposed DeepCwind project that is requesting funding from the Department of Energy. Anything else is a mockery of the NEPA process and serves only  political haste, not scientific certainty


In conclusion we continue to find the scope of review of a number of critical issues to be seriously inadequate. Therefore we believe that  the University of Maine should be required to  prepare a supplemental Environmental Assessment to address those issues, as cited below.  Please note that these issues and the University of Maine's state permit to operate its wind testing area off Monhegan  are presently subject of litigation in Maine Superior Court.
 
Sincerely
Ron Huber, for
Penobscot Bay Watch

May 23, 2011

Feds to public: Should we give DeepCwind $20 million? Or not?

Feds call for public input by June 9th on their draft environmental assessment of the likely impacts of the  proposed DeepCwind project off Monhegan. Feds'll then decide to give 20 millions to the University. Or not.  What does that fed draft assessment tell us? Read it and related info!
Department of Energy's Deepcwind Draft Environmental Assessment Documents. (pdfs)

DOE Public Notice of Draft Environmental Assessment 1page (Includes who to email to.)


Draft Environmental Assessment 108 pages

Scoping materials  40 pages.   What the agencies, Lobstermens Association, Pen Bay Watch etc told the feds

Letters and Consultation 34 pages   Agency letters on endangered species


DeepCwind's 2011 report on their project

Audio recordings of DeepCwind official Habib Dagher

* October 19, 2010  Habib Dagher speaks at 1st annual Maine Deepwater Offshore Wind Conference (one hour)
* May 20, 2010  Habib Dagher speaks at public meeting at Rockport opera House - one hour
* Habib Dagher at two work sessions of the Maine Legislature's Utility & Energy Committee on LD 1810 An Act To Implement the recommendations of the Governor's Ocean Energy Task Force
 March 18,  2010  Work session   Dr Habib Dagher 12 minutes
 March 23, 2010 Work Session  Dr Habib Dagher,  10 minutesQ&A Dr. Habib Dagher,  8 minutes

MORE INFO http://penbay.org/wind/mainewind.html

Dec 20, 2010

DeepCwind - will it get DeepSixed by Republican Pork Hawks?

There it was in the news: A rejected federal appropriation bill left the  DeepCwind Consortium's distant water  offshore windpower project quite suddenly stripped of nearly all of its funding! 
   Said the PPH: "Funding in the [now-dead] legislation included... $10 million for deepwater, offshore wind research at the University of Maine at Orono, and myriad of other spending initiatives."
    Dr. Habib Dagher,... said the $10 million was a continuation of funding from a competitive grant won by the university......Dagher said that the program was also promised $20 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy budget after Secretary of Energy Steven Chu came to visit Maine. That funding also is contingent upon Congress approving a new budget."

Absent philanthropic grand gestures from the Monied Progressives; this project may have no where to go for the foreseeable future.  One hopes this doesn't open the door for pressure to be brought to induce closer-to-shore piledriven wind nightmares like those proposed as "Cape Wind"...




Oct 20, 2010

DeepCwind Consortium met October 16, 2010 in Northport. Audio of keynote talk & environmental panel

On October 19, 2010, Dr. Habib Dagher, director of the University of Maine's Advanced Structures and Composites Center, spoke for an hour and 16 minutes at the 1st annual Maine Deepwater Offshore Wind Conference, about the DeepCwind Consortium plan for developing over-the-horizon floating windfarms. Listen to his speech  Dagher is followed by a panel of 4 scientists who talk for an hour on the likely environmental impacts of developing the offshore wind test center off Monhegan Island
Media Coverage 
* 10/19 /10 WCSH TV  Consortium discusses potential for offshore wind at Northport conference  by Mike DeSumma, Multimedia Journalist
* 10/20/10 Bangor Daily News Offshore wind research aired at conference. by Bill Trotter, Reporter
WCSH TV Coverage: : NORTHPORT, Maine (NEWS CENTER) --- It has been a year since the DeepCwind Consortium received grant support from the U.S. Department of Energy to develop technology for wind turbines in deep water. On Monday that group, which is made up of state companies, manufacturers and researchers at the University of Maine hosted a special conference in Northport to discuss their progress and the current potential for offshore wind in Maine. It was open to state businesses, political leaders and even those who are skeptical of the idea.

At this time researchers say that there's enough wind off of the state's coast to produce levels of power equal to roughly 150 nuclear power plants. The goal of the consortium is to harness 3 percent of that energy over the next 20 years.

The University of Maine's Composites Center is currently working on a floating turbine and researchers say that they are looking to place it off of the coast of Monhegan Island by June of 2012. Eventually, members of the consortium hope to install a five-turbine, 25-megawatt wind farm in coastal waters.

Yet environmentalists are worried about what kind of effect those turbines will have on ocean currents and sea life.
So much of marine life spends a lot of time in the larval state as plankton," said Ron Huber, who is the executive director for the environmental group Penobscot Bay Watch, "It's totally at the mercy of water currents and you want to be very cautious about anything that can disrupt or change the nature of those currents."

"We have fish tags and mammal tags," remarked Habib Dagher, who is director of the university's composite center, noting that tests are already underway at the proposed turbine test site, "so we're studying that before the turbine gets into the water and then when we put the turbine in the water, then we'll see what difference it makes and that's the only way to find out."

The Maine Public Utilities Commissions is already taking bids for the construction of the 25-megawatt farm. Supporters of the project say those bids are due by next May.
NEWS CENTER
END

Photographs by Ron Huber

Jul 11, 2010

Maine DeepCwind enthusiasts: will they face up to the climate-altering impacts of their energy extraction plans.

Or must they be pushed?
The verdict is in
Extraction of wind energy from the lower atmosphere via large ocean windfarm projects 
does indeed alter the climate.

Read:
Resource Decrease by Large Scale Wind Farming dr.ir. G.P. Corten (corten@ecn.nl), dr.ir. A.J. Brand (brand@ecn.nl) ECN Wind Energy - Wind Farm Design - The Netherlands


Goram Brostrom, senior scientist Nowegian Meteorological Agency




Windmills at sea will affect the climate (autotranslated by Google, so some funny words) Goram Brostrom, senior scientist Nowegian Meteorological Agency




Given the broadness and reasoned  concern that has arisen about wind energy extraction's effect on climate, it was deeply disappointing when earlier this year University of Maine's Dr. Habib Dagher blithely, nay, bluntly brushed aside the Norwegian metrological agency's exhaustive review. Not an issue. 


This  may be mostly true as regards the scale model experimental R&D windmills he will lead work on, somewhere off the coast of Maine,  but since the point of those is to pave the way for utility-scale deepwater offshore windmilling, dismissing the work of Goram Brostrom, senior scientist Nowegian Meteorological agency, and others, as not-credible leaves the American plan for the Gulf of Maine with no consideration  of this important issue at all.

For DeepCwind to fail to include sober examination of the likely climatic impacts of ocean windfarming within their deliberations from the start suggests that those seeking financial gain from the  R&D effort  fear the results of such an examination.

Regrettably, when  prudence and precaution are cast to the winds,  those concerned about the climate changing effects of wind energy extraction have little recourse but to seek  to see such precaution enforced by the gavel of the judiciary.

It is a shame that DeepCwind's effort to pool myriad talents to discover how best to harvest wind offshore must be taken to the judicial woodshed, but doing offshore wind right is much more important than doing it in a needless hurry.

Mar 19, 2010

3/18/10 Maine ocean wind bill: Legislative worksession Listen to speakers

Listen to speakers at the March 18, 2010 work session of the Maine legislature's Utility and Energy Committee on LD 1810, Implementing the findings of the Governor's Task Force on Ocean Energy   Listen to March 11th public hearing on LD 1810 Mp3s   

* Introduction to the Worksession 4min
* MDEP's Beth Nagusky describes proposed changes to Bill Part A 17 minutes
* MDEP's Nagusky Q&A session 11 minutes
* Patrice Farrell, Maine Lobstermen's Association 3 & 1/2 minutes (Read MLAs Letter on LD 1810)
* MDEP's Beth Nagusky describes proposed changes to Part B of LD 1811
* Suzanne Sayre 2 minutes
* John Ferland Ocean Renewable Energy Corp 1 minutes
* Dianne Messer, advocate, Liberty Maine 2 minutes
* Chris O'Neill, Friends of Maine Mountains 1 minutes
* Todd Rousette (sp?) Preti Flaherty lawfirm 2 minutes
* MDEP's Beth Nagusky describes more changes to Part B
* MDEPs Beth Nagusky on changes to Part C of bill
* MDEP's Beth Nagusky on changes to Part D of bill
* MDEP Beth Nagusky on Changed to Part E of Bill
* MDEP Beth Nagusky questioned on Part E 7 min
 * MDEP Beth Nagusky questioned more 10 minutes
 * University of Maine Dr Dagher 12 minutes
 * Final stakeholders and close of meeting  11 minutes

Feb 18, 2010

The End of Lobstering? Big Wind twisting legislative arms to open ALL Maine saltwater to windmills

The DeepCWind Consortium  is a loose confederation of  entrepeneurs, general contractors, windmill companies, investment bankers, eco-yuppies, engineering firms and others, hunkered down around the multimillion dollar pile of stimulus money that got earmarked to Maine for wind energy R&D.
Listen to Jake Ward of the DeepCwind Consortium visiting Monhegan on Feb 16th describe the newstate  legislation  Click Here (2 minute mp3)

That's right. Representatives of the  DeepCwind Consortium  who came to Monhegan that day  to do a powerpoint presentation on their plans for a brace of R&D windmills off that fair isle, let slip the fact that there is a bill  being bandied about by the Maine legislature - but not yet "released" into public view- that would formally open ALL of Maine's territorial Sea to offshore wind extraction and tide extraction.
But they are restless. The state of Maine has granted them a measly 3,200 acres out of Maine's millions upon millions of  acres of  territorial coastal waters, to snatch wind from.  Filling the view off Monhegan (photo) won't be enough. More Monhegan views at risk . A mere appetizer! They hunger for more.

LOTS MORE

As you read this, the DeepCWind Consortium is busy in Augusta. That unholy choir is singing $weet nothing$ into the ears of  Maine legislative leaders, asking for nothing less than unbridled access to all of Maine's coastal waters.  






Trailing behind them - Canadian salmon farm interests, eager to fill in the spaces between wind turbines and tidecatchers with millions of their genetically engineered little darlings. Following them: feather collectors, for the great number of seabirds that will be attracted by the penned fish and by the wild fishes drawn to the giant floating wind and tide structures will have to fly the gauntlet of those blades as they dive on the fishes, and many shall sadly fail the blade-spotting challenge.

Just as Big Aquaculture tried (and failed, thanks to vigorous defense by small Not In My BaY groups, especially Friends of Blue Hill Bay and East Penobscot Bay Environmental Alliance), the burgeoning windpower industry will try to slowly force lobstering out, square mile by square mile, from wind-suitable Maine state waters. Divide and conquer being their usual tactic, expect Lobster Zone Councils to be pitted against each other. Expect attempts to pit the Down East Lobstermens' Association against the Maine Lobstermen's Association

Towns will be forced to accept "Community Benefit Agreements"  Lobstermen will be put on the PILL : "Payment In Lieu of Lobstering". Forced to give up their heritage "for the greater good" of the investors.  They will be pressured by paid-off ex-politicians, hand in cash-sticky hand with the sold-out "practical" enviros of Sierra Club, NRCM, Island Institute and the ENGO like, who, once the POWER money appeared, seem to have lost any qualms about throwing their friends in the fishing industry under the clean energy bus.


Can this be stopped?  Only if the Legislature's Utilities and Energy Committee sees the light. You can illuminate them by dropping a few words to the committee. Email your words to Kristen Gottlieb, the Committee's hardworking clerk, and ask her to distribute them to committee members.



Be brief and to the point: Opening up any of Maine's coastal waters to commercial wind extraction before any R&D is carried out in the small experimental locations already permitted would be foolishly,  dangerously premature.  


Tell them the industry wants to rush in and take leasehold possession of  100s of square miles of Maine's coastal waters, NOW, so they are grandfathered against responsible regulation is not yet close to completion -  as litigation presently before the court shows. 


Tell them not to allow fast talking energy entrepeneurs, investment bankers, and their surrogates to push through  legislatnio allowing such an outrageous Gulf of Maine-grab to happen