Thursday, December 29, 2011

Offshore wind energy hopes still alive in NJ and MA




Despite offshore wind energy's disappointing collapse this week in Delaware, there was some good news for the struggling industry in Massachusetts and New Jersey.


The Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that the state public utilities department was right to deny a motion filed by project opponents against a 2009 power purchase agreement between Cape Wind, a proposed 24-square-mile wind farm in the Nantucket Sound, and National Grid which agreed to purchase power from the wind farm.

And, although wind developers seeking to install turbines off the coast of New Jersey face many of the same economic challenges that unhinged Delaware's project, at least one analyst says Garden State lawmakers took steps that could make a big difference.   

Related:
Coast Guard to study future of boat traffic, wind farms

A few of our recent blog posts:
Time runs out on Delaware's offshore wind project

Philadelphia now recycling milk & juice containers, too

In NJ, a clash over control of environmental regulations 
EPA report links fracking to groundwater contamination
Energy and environment bills in NJ Legislature on Dec 8 


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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Time runs out on Delaware's offshore wind project









With no prospect of federal support in sight and no domestic or European buyer willing to assume future costs, Delaware's offshore wind energy project is officially dead.

The (Wilmington) News-Journal reported today that NRG Energy terminated its landmark offshore wind power contract with Delmarva Power on Tuesday.
"The hard-won 2008 power purchase agreement, the first for offshore wind in the United States, was considered an essential ingredient in building a wind farm off the coast of Delaware. Tuesday was the final day under the contract for Bluewater to exercise an escape clause without forfeiting a $4 million security deposit.

"Officials at NRG, which purchased Bluewater in 2009, notified Delmarva's parent company, Pepco Holdings Inc., of the termination Tuesday afternoon, said Matt Likovich, a Delmarva spokesman. Delmarva reported it accepted the termination."
See the full story here
 

Related:
Delmarva Power to credit Del. customers $2M

Delaware offshore wind farm proposal abandoned
Bluewater: What went wrong?
New Jersey Developer Says It's Giving Up on Offshore Wind

Editorial: Offshore wind farms still have Delaware potential  
NRG Energy dumps N.J. offshore wind farm plan

A few of our recent blog posts:
Philadelphia now recycling milk & juice containers, too

In NJ, a clash over control of environmental regulations 
EPA report links fracking to groundwater contamination
Energy and environment bills in NJ Legislature on Dec 8 


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Friday, December 16, 2011

Top 2 environmental news stories for PA & NJ - 12/15/11




Business, government and environmental leaders who subscribe to EnviroPolitics accessed full versions of the environmental news stories below in today's edition
--and dozens more!


In Pennsylvania
  

Cabot report finds chemicals but no health threats in whistleblower investigation 
A gas drilling company’s investigation of spills and leaks alleged by a former employee at its Susquehanna County well sites found nothing in the streams, ponds and soil it sampled at levels that would pose a risk to human health except metals it said occur naturally in the region Scranton Times-Tribune

Waste-to-energy proposal reviewed Two years ago, it seemed likely that New Jersey-based Delta Thermo Energy would soon be using a new process to turn Allentown's trash and sewage into energy in a plant on the Little Lehigh Creek. Since then, the city has announced a partnership with the company, there have been public forums and even a public bid for a contract. On Wednesday night, City Council members got their first chance to ask questions about a proposed 100-plus-page binding agreement with Delta Thermo Morning Call


In New Jersey

NJ plans to work around federal block of power plants
Presiding over his last meeting as president of the Board of Public Utilities, Lee Solomon promised the state would press forward with efforts to build new generating capacity in New Jersey in a variety of ways if a controversial pilot program to spur construction of new plants fails to be realized NJ Spotlight 

Report on Hurricane Irene faults JCP&L The state’s preliminary report on power outages caused by the first hurricane to make landfall in New Jersey since 1903 primarily focuses on the electric utility virtually everyone wants to blame NJ Spotlight



Thursday, December 15, 2011

Philadelphia now recycling milk & juice containers, too

Congratulations to the City of Philadelphia where you now can recycle...

Milk in those waxy paper containers, as well as...




...and even



See
The Philadelphia Inquirer and GreenPhillyBlog report the environmental news of the city's latest single-stream recycling success.


Have a recycling success story you'd like to share? Or an opinion on how your town, county or state could boost its recycling rate?  Use the comment box below.  If one is not visible, click on the tiny 'comments' line.

Our most recent blog posts:

What killed Delaware's offshore wind energy project?

Big trouble for offshore wind energy project in Delaware
In NJ, a clash over control of environmental regulations 
EPA report links fracking to groundwater contamination
Energy and environment bills in NJ Legislature on Dec 8 


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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

What killed Delaware's offshore wind energy project?


What caused Princeton-based NRG Energy to mothball its plans for an energy wind farm off the coast of Delaware? [Big trouble for offshore wind energy project in Delaware]

Federal purse strings, yanked by a Republican-controlled Congress with a contemptuous view of "green" projects played a significant role. But, so too, did an unforeseen economic reversal that slowed the nation's insatiable appetite for electric power and forced private investors to reexamine the potential payback from costly alternative energy projects. 

The News Journal's Aaron Nathans provides answers today in: Bluewater: What went wrong?

DFM News reporter John Hurdle poses similar questions in Dissecting what put Delaware’s offshore wind farm plan in peril

Hurdle also questions the effect of the project's collapse on other leading Atlantic Ocean wind farm projects-- Fisherman’s Energy off New Jersey, the Deepwater Wind project off Block Island, NY, and Cape Wind off Massachusetts.

Only time will tell, but the future looks gloomy for the U.S. wind industry, as AOL Energy's Shifra Mincer reports in Wind Industry Nervous As Tax Credit Expiration Date Looms.

Renewable Energy World offers a more sanguine view in US Offshore Wind Project Updates   

What's your take?  Tell us in the comment box below.  If one is not visible, click on the tiny 'comments' line.

Related:
New Jersey Developer Says It's Giving Up on Offshore Wind
Editorial: Offshore wind farms still have Delaware potential  
NRG Energy dumps N.J. offshore wind farm plan

Our most recent blog posts:
Big trouble for offshore wind energy project in Delaware

In NJ, a clash over control of environmental regulations 
EPA report links fracking to groundwater contamination
Energy and environment bills in NJ Legislature on Dec 8 

Energy & environment legislation up in NJ Assembly

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Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Big trouble for offshore wind energy project in Delaware

A  project which raised hopes for U.S. offshore wind energy when it was made public five years ago is now all but dead in the water.

Making big environmental news today is New Jersey-based NRG Energy's announcement that it will terminate its Bluewater Wind power-purchase contract with Delmarva Power at the end of this year.

The project captured the public's imagination five years ago as a utility-scale, carbon-free source of energy, 13 miles off the Delaware coast. The turbines have been expected to provide 200 megawatts--enough to power about 54,000 homes.

"Our people have worked hard and we've made a considerable financial investment in the wind park, but that effort cannot overcome the difficult and unfortunate realities of the current market," said David Crane, NRG president and CEO.

The alternative energy publication Recharge said: that the decision "highlights the difficulties that even well-capitalized developers such as NRG face in financing offshore projects with long lead times, as they struggle to navigate costly permitting and energy tax policy uncertainties at the federal level."

According to Recharge:
NRG said its decision was in response to Congress eliminating funding for the Energy Department’s Section 1705 loan guarantee program, and failure thus far to extend federal investment and production tax credits (PTCs) for offshore wind that expire next year.
NRG says its Bluewater Wind subsidiary, which it acquired in November 2009, was in line for a loan guarantee for the Delaware project before Congress earlier this year removed some of the program’s funding as part of a broader spending reduction.

Even so, NRG says it has supported the Delaware project with “significant investments” in development, including design and engineering studies, state and federal permitting and leasing fees, ecological assessments, and professional and consulting fees.

"But Bluewater has been unable to find an investment partner, despite interest from two dozen potential candidates and an attractive 25-year power purchase deal with Delmarva Power & Light. That deal in June 2008 was the first involving an offshore wind project. Delmarva would initially buy power for between 13 cents and 14 cents per kWh, with a 2.5% annual increase for the contract life.
The News Journal  today reports: 
NRG still expects to receive federal approval for a lease to build offshore wind turbines off the Delaware coast, said David Gaier, NRG spokesman. The company would hold onto this lease as an asset, unless NRG finds a buyer for Bluewater, he said.
Even absent the contract, NRG could re-enter the offshore wind business in the future if market conditions are good enough, Gaier said. Or it could sell Bluewater at a later date, he said.
All in all, it's a sad day when the U.S., in such dramatic fashion, continues to fall behind Europe and China in the development of a source of energy as clean and plentiful as offshore wind.

Related:
NRG Energy places US offshore wind project plans on hold
Wind project in jeopardy as NRG drops contract
Will NRG save Bluewater's wind projects? 

Offshore wind turbine goes really, really big
Top brass briefed on giant offshore wind farm scheme 

Care to add your opinion on the issue? Use the comment box below.  If one is not visible, click on the tiny 'comment' line.

Our most recent blog posts:

In NJ, a clash over control of environmental regulations 
EPA report links fracking to groundwater contamination
Energy and environment bills in NJ Legislature on Dec 8 

Energy & environment legislation up in NJ Assembly
Shale gas fracking gets a new black eye: Illegal dumping



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Monday, December 12, 2011

Top 2 environmental news stories for PA & NJ - 12/12/11




Business, government and environmental leaders who subscribe to EnviroPolitics accessed full versions of the environmental news stories below in today's edition
--and dozens more!


In Pennsylvania

Similar pipes, different rules
When the owners of the Tennessee natural gas pipeline decided to expand the pipe in the Marcellus Shale region of Pennsylvania's northern tier, the federal safety rules they had to follow filled a book. Chesapeake Energy is building a pipeline in Bradford County, the same size as the Tennessee line, 24 inches in diameter and it's designed to operate at even higher pressure - up to 1,440 pounds per square inch. But for this line, in this rural section of shale country, there are no safety rules at all Inquirer

Sunoco Refinery workers playing a waiting game In September, Sunoco Inc. Chairman and CEO Lynn Elsenhans announced she would close the Marcus Hook and Philadelphia refineries by July if a buyer for the facilities wasn’t found. Now,  the deadline has been extended Daily Local


In New Jersey

Can urban transit hubs help revitalize cities? Ambitious $1.5B  tax credit program hopes to attract development, jobs, and pedestrians to downtown mass transit centers NJ Spotlight 


Legislation pushes logging on state-owned lands Supporters of the estimated $2.7 million program say it would help the state nurse its 800,000 acres of land back to health by removing trees and allowing sunlight to feed new growth  Statehouse Bureau