The Biden administration on June 11 said it was seeking buyers for offshore wind energy leases in the shallow waters between Long Island and New Jersey as part of its effort to ramp up the share of offshore wind generation over the next decade.
In a statement, the U.S. Department of the Interior said the proposed sale for offshore wind development on the Outer Continental shelf in the New York Bight has “the potential to unlock over 7 gigawatts of offshore wind energy, powering more than 2.6 million homes and supporting thousands of new jobs.”
The proposed lease sale also came with a stipulation that bidders create union jobs. The Biden administration has said it wants to build up a clean energy economy with union labor.
“The development of renewable energy resources is an important piece of addressing” climate change, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said in the statement, adding the “new proposed lease stipulations put a priority on creating and sustaining good-paying union jobs as we build a clean energy economy.”
The move is the administration’s latest in an effort to double the capacity of fledging U.S. offshore wind sector by 2030 and decarbonize the power sector by 2035.
Earlier this year, the administration unveiled a blueprint for offshore wind power generation that set a target to deploy 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030, which the administration said would be enough to power 10 million homes and cut 78 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide per year.
Last month, Interior approved the first commercial scale offshore wind farm, the 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind project, a joint venture between Avangrid Inc, a unit of Spain’s Iberdrola, off the coast of Massachusetts.
It is also exploring wind energy potential in the Gulf of Mexico and California, and is reviewing projects in another area of New Jersey as well as Rhode Island.
The area announced up for sale June 11 includes eight lease sites that could be auctioned for commercial wind energy development and is open for 60 days of public comments before a final sale decision is made, the Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said, adding it was the first such proposed lease of the Biden administration.
The offshore energy lobby group said the announcement will be an economic boon for the east coast.
“Providing new offshore wind opportunities will boost critical investments into the supply chain, ports and workers, and will provide a foundation for exceptional offshore wind growth,” National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) President Erik Milito said.
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