Virginia vaulted to the front line of offshore wind energy development when it won its wind research lease from the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management on March 24.

The lease to Virginia’s Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy allows development of a 12-megawatt, grid-connected facility of two Alstom 6-megawatt turbines and associated cabling and meteorological buoys to document conditions on the outer continental shelf, about 24 miles east of Virginia Beach and adjacent to the area BOEM has designated the Virginia Wind Energy Area.

BOEM officials said the data gathered by Virginia’s pilot project would be publicly available and usable by any other entities seeking to lease shelf locations to build turbines.

The planned twin turbines would generate electricity for just 3,000 homes, but the lease sends a more powerful signal in moving Virginia ahead in developing a wind industry.

“Developing our clean energy resources is an essential element of building a new Virginia economy…With this research lease, Virginia is leading the way in building wind turbines in the Atlantic Ocean and taking the next step toward the clean energy economy we need to create jobs and lower energy costs now and into the future,” Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe said in a statement praising the lease.

Virginia is pushing hard for offshore gas and oil exploration that would benefit its shipbuilding and ports industry. But wind has been part of that portfolio too, when the state partnered with Dominion Resources Inc., a diversified energy company, and others to start the Virginia Offshore Wind Technology Advancement Project.

Dominion was the recipient of a $47 million grant promised by the U.S. Department of Energy, part of the start-up renewable energy subsides initiated early in the Obama administration.

Part of the success is “the Virginia project has gotten some federal money, and it’s a small project,” said Jeremy Firestone, a professor of marine policy at the University of Delaware’s wind power program. “You’ve got a vertically integrated utility involved. That all helped make it happen.”

As the Virginia project goes forward, others are sputtering. The struggling Cape Wind project in Massachusetts took a blow this winter when two of its biggest potential power purchasers pulled out of their deals. But Firestone says there are higher levels of public support for wind power along other reaches of the coast.

“Cape Wind is the most controversial wind project in the world. It is an outlier,” he said.

On the same day the Virginia lease was announced, the offshore wind power group Fishermen’s Energy was in a New Jersey state appeals court, arguing with the state Board of Public Utilities over the BPU’s refusal to approve its five-turbine demonstration project that would be built a couple of miles off the beach in Atlantic City. The city, already home to a massive onshore wind energy installation that greets visitors driving into the resort, readily bought into a 2010 proposal from a consortium of New Jersey fishing and seafood businesses organized by Dan Cohen of Atlantic Capes Fisheries in Cape May.

“We found strong support for the project,” said Firestone, who has done extensive study of public attitudes to the Fishermen’s Energy proposal. The project seems to work for Atlantic City and its visitor audience, because “there’s a lot going on there, so it’s just another part of the show,” Firestone said.

But Fishermen’s Energy does not work for the New Jersey utilities regulators, who insist its finances add up to a bad deal for electric ratepayers, even if Fishermen’s Energy has the same $47 million commitment as Virginia from the Department of Energy.

In legal papers, Fishermen’s Energy argues that the Board of Public Utilities stalled its review process for two years, and in the end made a decision that runs counter to the state’s Offshore Wind Economic Development Act that a then newly elected Gov. Chris Christie signed in 2010.

That was a few months after Ken Salazar, U.S. Secretary of the Interior in the first year of the Obama administration, hosted a massive public meeting in Atlantic City, talking up the prospects for mid-Atlantic wind power. Deepwater Wind proposed a 1,000-megawatt project 20 miles off New Jersey, but of late has concentrated on its Block Island wind farm, where five turbines of 30 megawatts have been permitted in Rhode Island state waters.

Political observers say a lot has changed since then, including Christie’s presidential ambitions and his need to deal with Republican donors and supporters who don’t like government subsidies for renewable energy sources.

“The train is starting to leave the station” with wind power purveyors looking for favorable locations, said Doug O’Malley of Environment New Jersey, which supports wind power. “Deepwater was interested in New Jersey, but they went elsewhere when it looked like the BPU was stalling.”

But there are larger political and economic trends in play too, said Firestone of the University of Delaware.

“To build these projects you need the federal policies to be aligned. We’ve got a dysfunctional Congress and that makes it hard to put in functional policies,” Firestone said. On the economics of power supply, natural gas and the revolution of hydraulic fracturing has “completely changed the price landscape” with cheap, plentiful gas, he said.

“The (wind) industry will come, and when it comes it will be in a big way,” Firestone said. “But it’s coming later than a lot of people expected, including myself.”

  

Ken Hocke has been the senior editor of WorkBoat since 1999. He was the associate editor of WorkBoat from 1997 to 1999. Prior to that, he was the editor of the Daily Shipping Guide, a transportation daily in New Orleans. He has written for other publications including The Times-Picayune. He graduated from Louisiana State University with an arts and sciences degree, with a concentration in English, in 1978.