Trump used to hate wind power but now seems to embrace it
In March, the Interior
Department auctioned off 122,405 acres of water off Kitty Hawk, North Carolina,
to the Spanish-based Avangrid for $9 million. Avangrid, a division of
Iberdrola, beat out three competitors, including Norway’s Statoil and Germany
wind farm developer wpd.
Interior Secretary
Ryan Zinke hailed the auction, affirming that offshore wind is "one tool
in the all-of-the-above energy toolbox that will help power America with
domestic energy, securing energy independence, and bolstering the economy. This
is a big win.”
That followed the
equally stunning announcement a week prior by Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management that it plans to stage another competitive lease auction in 400,000
acres of New England waters, triggered by unsolicited applications for the same
area by Statoil and the U.S. wing of Germany’s PNE Wind.
The parcels are
adjacent or near areas off Massachusetts and Rhode Island already leased by
Denmark’s DONG Energy, Germany’s OffshoreMW and Rhode Island’s Deepwater Wind.
Trump became an anti-wind power NIMBY when Scotland refused to cancel an offshore wind farm within sight of Trump's golfourse. |
Those two developments signal that the Trump administration takes the economic potential of offshore wind energy far more seriously than might be assumed from the president’s past disparagement of wind turbines.
Trump told the New York Times shortly after his election, “We don't make the windmills in the United States. They're made in Germany and Japan."
But it may have dawned
on the Trump administration that offshore wind is actually much more an
American industry than most people realize.
In 2015, Boston-based
General Electric made the biggest purchase in its history, acquiring the French
energy infrastructure giant Alstom for $10.6 billion.
The deal included Alstom’s offshore wind turbine manufacturing operations, including a plant in Saint Nazaire, France, that made the five turbines spinning in the U.S.’s first offshore wind farm, the 30-megawatt Deepwater Wind Block Island project.
The deal included Alstom’s offshore wind turbine manufacturing operations, including a plant in Saint Nazaire, France, that made the five turbines spinning in the U.S.’s first offshore wind farm, the 30-megawatt Deepwater Wind Block Island project.
GE proceeded last year
to purchase the world’s largest turbine blade manufacturer, Danish-based LM
Wind, for $1.65 billion. Last month, the LM Wind division announced it is
building a blade manufacturing plant in the Normandy region of France,
providing at least 550 direct and 2,000 indirect jobs as that nation ramps up
its offshore industry. The factory will be capable of making the longest
turbine blade in the world, nearly 300 feet long, for new-generation 8 MW
turbines.
Besides GE, New
York-based Blackstone, one of the world’s top investment firms, was behind the
2011 funding of Germany’s 80-turbine, 288-MW Meerwind offshore wind farm.
Blackstone, with the help of Bank of America Merrill Lynch, last year sold its
80 percent stake to Chinese investors.
New York-based Goldman
Sachs also has a 7 percent stake in DONG, the first company to cross the
1,000-turbine mark. Europe has a total of 3,600 turbines spinning, providing
12.6 Gigawatts of power, enough for 13 million homes, according to industry
advocate Wind Europe.
Critical mass close
It is clear that the
offshore wind industry now wants to cross the water, with rocket-sized
components that are too long and too massive to economically import long term
from Europe. If it does, it could easily blow to our shores the skilled local
construction and technical jobs and large-scale manufacturing President Trump
has promised.
Deepwater Wind was
recently cleared to begin a 15-turbine project off Montauk, Long Island, in waters
where Deepwater could eventually construct up to 200 turbines. In December,
Statoil won the federal lease for a 79,000-acre area of ocean off Long Island’s
Jones Beach for a record $42.5 million.
Besides the
competition in North Carolina, Maryland is in the approval stage of offshore
wind proposals. And with Massachusetts now mandating 1,600 MW of offshore wind
in its energy portfolio by 2027 and with New York Governor Andrew Cuomo pushing
for 2,400 MW of offshore wind by 2030, the U.S. is about to become part of
"the brightest spot in the global clean energy investment picture,"
as Bloomberg New Energy Finance put it.
Job engine, port revivals
The inspiration points
in Europe are endless. Last year saw a record $26 billion of investments, as
the industry is on track to double the 12.6 GW by 2020.
The United Kingdom has
approved construction of the largest wind farm yet, the 174-turbine, 1.2 GW
Hornsea One Array. DONG says it expects Hornsea to generate 2,000 jobs during
the construction phase and 300 operational jobs thereafter.
DONG and the British
government have begun planning a second wind Hornsea wind farm that would be
even bigger, 300 turbines and 1.8 GW, adding another 2,000 construction and
nearly 600 maintenance jobs.
In Germany, the
offshore wind industry is responsible for nearly halving unemployment in
Bremerhaven and Cuxhaven, towns northwest of Hamburg, were hit hard in the late
20th century by the decline of fishing, shipbuilding and the closing of US
military facilities. Local officials likened Bremerhaven to Detroit for its
25-percent unemployment rate.
Today, with a downtown
core gleaming with new museums and hotels, those same officials call offshore
wind their regional "moon shot." Up in Cuxhaven, Siemens is putting
the finishing touches on a giant turbine plant that should go into operation in
the middle of this year, bringing yet 1,000 more jobs to the region, adding to
the 20,000 jobs claimed by the German offshore wind industry.
Denmark, despite
having only the population of Massachusetts, remains a per-capita titan in
offshore employment with 10,000 jobs. The UK, which has 41 percent of Europe’s
installed capacity, had at least 30,000 direct and indirect jobs, according to
UK Renewables and is obviously adding thousands more with oncoming projects
such as Hornsea.
In December, Siemens
completed a $381 million turbine-blade plant in Hull that will employ 1,000
people when fully operational.
Unlike much of modern
manufacturing, The Guardian’s story on the plant’s opening noted:
"Surprisingly, the manufacturing process is almost entirely done by hand,
rather than robots. The workforce includes former supermarket workers,
aerospace industry experts on second careers and builders who learned
fiberglass skills locally from fitting bathrooms and making caravan
parts."
And Hull and other
British port towns, according to newspaper features, are experiencing rebounds
akin to Bremerhaven and Cuxhaven. A January Sunday Express story recalled how
Hull declined from the overfishing of cod into a "rundown backwater"
that topped the list of worst places in the UK to live in 2003. With
redevelopment strategies that included the investment of offshore companies
like Siemens, the city has rebounded to be a popular tourist destination.
Grimsby, a 33-mile
drive from Hull, already has 1,500 offshore wind jobs and, with the planned
Hornsea projects, has plans to grow and become the biggest offshore wind
industry cluster in the world. DONG said in 2015 it plans to invest $7.4
billion in the Grimsby/Hull region by 2019.
Elsewhere in the UK,
another massive offshore wind project, the 102-turbine, 714 MW East Anglia One,
promises 3,000 jobs.
The American potential
The building of
house-sized nacelles and football-field-length blades, the manufacture and
laying of miles of underwater cables, the building of jack-up installation
barges and maintenance vessels, the welding of foundations and towers, port
rehabilitation and all the nuts and bolts in between should rise from its
current 75,000 jobs to between 170,000 and 204,000 jobs, according to Wind
Europe.
A recent New York Times feature on the industry said, "Offshore wind, once a fringe investment, with limited scope and reliant on government subsidies, is moving into the mainstream."
According a joint
report last September by the Department of the Interior and the Department of
Energy, a robust U.S. offshore wind industry could employ up to 34,000 workers
by 2020, up to 80,000 by 2030 and up to 181,000 by 2050.
The industry would be
making $440 million in annual lease payments and $680 million in annual
property tax payments for local economies. Better still, a University of
Delaware study last year calculated that just 2 GW of projects in the pipeline
in Massachusetts waters would ignite such an efficient local industry supply
chain that the price of offshore wind energy should be even with other energy
options by 2030.
"At that point,
the technology presumably could continue to compete on its own without any
continuing legislation," the study said.
Onshore bipartisan success
The onshore wind
industry is now at such cost parity that it is booming across America, from
liberal California to the conservative Great Plains and Texas. In fact, 80
percent of U.S. wind farms are in Republican congressional districts, according
to the American Wind Energy Association.
Wind energy surpassed
hydroelectric power in generating capacity for the first time last year.
According to AWEA, the
U.S. counterpart to Wind Europe, there are now more than 500 blade and turbine
factories and supply-chain manufacturing facilities making the 8,000 different
parts that go into one machine.
Domestic wind industry
jobs have crossed the 100,000 mark and the Bureau of Labor Statistics lists
wind service technician as the fastest-growing job through 2024, with a current
median pay of $51,050.
Wind service
technicians are a huge reminder that this is an industry where many jobs are
skilled working-class crafts that can be learned in technical colleges,
providing a fresh employment pathway for individuals, families and low-income
communities where 4-year college is often seen as unaffordable.
Despite his planned
sweeping rollbacks of environmental regulations he decries as "job
killing," offshore wind offers exactly the kinds of jobs President Trump
has said he would bring back to areas of America where other forms of
manufacturing have disappeared.
The Perry Factor?
Another reason for
optimism for offshore wind during the Trump administration is that Secretary of
Energy Rick Perry oversaw Texas becoming the nation’s leader in onshore wind
when he was governor.
Today, 12,000 turbines
provide 13 percent of the state’s electricity, powering 4 million homes, and
providing more than 24,000 jobs, according to AWEA.
The state’s
transmission grid completed a $7 billion upgrade to accommodate wind. As
governor, Perry boasted that Texas as a nation would rank sixth in the world in
onshore wind installed capacity.
Late in his
administration, he began to invest in offshore. In 2014, his Texas Emerging
Technology Fund awarded $2.2 million to Texas A&M University to explore
offshore wind. That grant was matched with $64 million of federal and industry
research investments.
When Mr. Perry was
confirmed as Energy Secretary, AWEA CEO Tom Kiernan said, "The Texas
success story with wind power has now become a model for America ... we look
forward to working with him at the Department of Energy to keep this success
story going."
The first signs are
that the success story will include offshore wind, spinning with jobs, and
revitalizing towns dimmed with decline.
Without officially
saying so, the Trump administration is deciding that the windmills can be made
here after all.
Derrick Z. Jackson is
a fellow in climate, energy at the Union of
Concerned Scientists' Center for Science and Democracy.
The Daily Climate is an independent, foundation-funded news
service covering energy, the environment and climate change. Find us on Twitter @TheDailyClimate or email editor Brian
Bienkowski at bbienkowski [at] EHN.org