By ecoRI News staff
The view of Block Island's turbines from Charlestown's Blue Shutters Beach. Oh yeah, tourists will take one look at that and will go back to New Jersey. (Photo by Will Collette) |
The U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has contracted the University of Rhode Island to document the effects of the Block Island Wind Farm on recreation and tourism.
This information will be used to
then create socioeconomic indicators to help regulators, industry, communities
and researchers measure the impacts of offshore renewable-energy facilities on
recreation and tourism activities in Rhode Island and potentially other places
in the country.
This two-year social science project is underway to both develop the indicators and engage the local community in the process.
This two-year social science project is underway to both develop the indicators and engage the local community in the process.
“This project will build upon
BOEM’s completed and ongoing studies seeking to characterize the effects of
offshore wind on recreation and tourism activities,” said Amy Stillings, a BOEM
industry economist from the Office of Renewable Energy Programs.
The project is expected to yield:
the first available empirical data on the effects of a U.S. offshore wind farm
on coastal recreation and tourism; a suite of indicators that can be used to
assess the potential effects of future offshore wind energy projects throughout
the United States; and a recommended subset of indicators that can be used to
monitor the effects of the wind farm on Rhode Island’s recreation and tourism
activities.
These three products will help
BOEM plan for the installation and management of future offshore wind-energy
projects in federal waters.
An interdisciplinary group of URI
social scientists and coastal management practitioners, including David Bidwell
and Amelia Moore from the Department of Marine Affairs in the College of the
Environment and Life Sciences, Hollie Smith from the Harrington School of
Communication and Media, and Jennifer McCann and Tiffany Smythe from the
Coastal Resources Center and Rhode Island Sea Grant, will provide BOEM with a
technical approach to document the effects of the Block Island Wind Farm on
recreation and tourism in the Rhode Island region.
For this BOEM project, an advisory
committee, made up of local industry and community representatives, regulators
and social scientists, ensures that the indicators are both rigorous and
realistic, and respond to the needs and issues of communities and stakeholders.
“The Block Island community looks
forward to having a greater understanding about how the wind farm interacts
with island tourism and recreation as it is very important to the people who
live here and earn livings from these industries,” said Jessica Willi,
executive director of the Block Island Tourism Council.