December 24, 2010
Massachusetts, Press releases

Federal agencies flying blind in Cape Wind approvals

Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, www.peer.org 23 December 2010

For Immediate Release: December 23, 2010
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337

FEDERAL AGENCIES FLYING BLIND IN CAPE WIND APPROVALS  – Internal E-Mails Admit Huge Data Gaps, Inability to Monitor and Pursue Mitigation

Boston – The controversial Cape Wind turbine farm slated for Nantucket Sound obtained federal approvals even though agency scientists conceded that they did not have the data to make required assessments, according to agency e-mails released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Red flags about avoidable impacts were rebuffed as were suggestions of ways to minimize harms to migratory birds, including threatened and endangered species.

The documents obtained by PEER under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and the Massachusetts Public Record Act evidence a pattern of demands for needed data being ignored. As a result the real ecological impacts of the controversial 130-turbine project located on a major bird migration corridor remain unknown. Agency e-mails show massive data gaps and the frustration of scientists, including –

“These e-mails detail how science took a back seat at every step of the process,” stated New England PEER Director Kyla Bennett, a former federal lawyer and scientist, highlighting one MMS e-mail that reads: “Now if only these microphones could discriminate among the ‘thuds’ made by bird and bat species when they hit the rotor!” “This e-mail shows that we are so in the dark about impacts that we will not even be able to count the carcasses.”

PEER is leading a coalition of groups that is suing to stop the project on the grounds that it needlessly and illegally will devastate federally protected migratory bird and bat populations. New concerns have also surfaced about acoustic and other negative effects on migrating whales, including the endangered North Atlantic Right Whale.

Many of the e-mails obtained under FOIA come from the later part of the Bush administration but some come from the first year under Obama. Significantly, Obama appointees did not reverse or revisit any of the approvals made with insufficient data. Ironically, the Obama administration is now rolling out an initiative to promote scientific integrity but no concrete rules have yet been promulgated.

“Even though the politics have changed, political manipulation of science is still going on in the Obama administration and this project is just another example,” said PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that even pleas by scientists for “reasonable and prudent” mitigation measures, such as shutting down the turbines during very short, heavy migration periods, were refused. “As the U.S. moves to rely more heavily on wind and other ‘green power’ sources, it is all the more important that the environmental reviews are done well.”


URL to article:  https://www.wind-watch.org/news/2010/12/24/federal-agencies-flying-blind-in-cape-wind-approvals/