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Preservation Society of Newport County’s answers to frequently asked questions regarding appeals of BOEM’s permitting of offshore wind industrialization 

Credit:  Preservation Society of Newport County | November 30, 2023 | culturalheritagepartners.com ~~

The Preservation Society of Newport County has received numerous media inquiries since it announced on November 22, 2023, that it was appealing federal agency approval of two wind farms off the Rhode Island coast in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

The appeals detail the failure of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to comply with the heightened levels of review required under the National Environmental Policy Act and the National Historic Preservation Act.

Developers have to date proposed nine massive wind farms off the coast. At least 457 turbines, each twice the height of Rhode Island’s Superman Building or taller, will be visible, occupying up to 100% of the ocean views from key community sites for the next 30 years. BOEM concludes this will cause a “major adverse impact” to Newport’s sense of place and economy. Danish developer Orsted’s own study suggests that this level of ocean industrialization could lead to losses to Newport’s heritage tourism economy of an estimated $5.17 billion and thousands of jobs, not including inflation, property value reductions, and loss of tax revenues). Yet, BOEM is allowing the developers to proceed without appropriately mapping these harms and without responsibly mitigating them.

To clarify the issues involved, the Society shares publicly the following responses to frequently asked questions posed about its appeals:

1. Why did the Preservation Society appeal BOEM’s decisions?

The Preservation Society appealed BOEM’s decisions because BOEM has violated federal laws passed by Congress to protect the Nation’s environmental and cultural resources. In repeatedly violating those laws to speed up the development of offshore wind farms, BOEM is setting a terrible precedent that significantly weakens the ability of those same laws to protect against environmental and cultural harms caused by every other type of industrial development, whether it be fracking on traditional Native American sites, building highways through the center of historically Black neighborhoods, or constructing coal-powered plants in low-income communities. This is among the primary reasons that the oldest and largest association of Tribal Nations, the National Congress of American Indians, has passed a strongly worded resolution calling for a moratorium on continued construction of industrial scale offshore wind farms until BOEM corrects its multiple failures to comply with its duties.

2. What is BOEM’s duty?

Every form of industrial development, even green energy projects with positive impacts, also has harmful impacts. BOEM has a federal mandate from Congress to look out for the interests of the American people by finding balance between the need for any type of industrial energy development in oceans and the harmful impact of that development on the environment and cultural resources. Other federal agencies have the same duty for different types of industrial development on land; for instance, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is similarly charged with balancing the benefits and harms of gas pipelines. It is BOEM’s duty to ensure that the risks of those impacts for offshore wind are shared between the project developers and the communities that are home to the environmental and cultural resources that are harmed. This duty has been federal law for more than 50 years, despite repeated efforts by the fossil fuels industry (many leaders of which now develop offshore wind projects) to weaken it. BOEM’s failure to ensure balance for offshore wind development on the East Coast is among the most egregious, fastest-moving, and largest scale failures of any federal agency in modern history.

BOEM knows that they are making serious mistakes. We know this because they are trying to fix those mistakes on the West Coast for the industry that is developing later there. They are moving too quickly on the East Coast, however, to take the time to fix their errors and instead are hoping that everyone just turns a blind eye or is intimidated from raising concerns for fear of being labeled as anti-environmentalists.

3. In what specific ways has BOEM failed to find balance?

BOEM’s legal process failures are so numerous that we encourage you to read the full complaints we have filed here and here – but, a few examples:

First, BOEM is obligated to consult adversely impacted communities very early in the project development process. In the case of the South Fork Wind Farm Project, BOEM allowed the developer to proceed long into project development without BOEM talking to Newport, even though BOEM documented very early on that Newport would undoubtedly be harmed by the projects.

Second, BOEM is required to analyze the cumulative impacts of all related or adjacent projects, not just look at each project in isolation. In these cases, as in cases up and down the Atlantic coast, BOEM is assessing the impacts of one wind project at a time. In the case of South Fork they begin with the project with the smallest number of turbines (because then it is easier to conclude that the harms are more limited), knowing full well that immediately behind that project are multiple other projects containing hundreds of turbines, creating an industrialized ocean with impacts greater than the sum of the parts. This “segmenting” of projects to draw less attention to scaled-up harms is an old fossil fuels industry trick, which some developers have brought over to offshore wind development, now with BOEM’s blessing.

Third, BOEM must have a staged process for permitting any project. First, BOEM must map the environmental and cultural resources that might be harmed. Then, analyze the nature and degree of harm. Next, require that adverse effects be avoided, minimized, or mitigated to the greatest extent possible. Only after completing those steps should BOEM decide whether to allow the project to proceed. In the case of offshore wind, BOEM has illegally reversed that order: they are allowing projects to proceed without having completed the first three steps. Imagine that this was a proposed factory threatening the water supply of a neighboring low-income historic community. No one would want to reverse the required legal order such that the factory is built before the regulating agency analyzes the impacts on the water. By setting this precedent for offshore wind, BOEM is setting the stage for exactly that pattern to happen in thousands of places across the country for years to come.

Fourth, BOEM has failed to ensure balance by allowing the risks of the harms of offshore industrialization to be borne by the impacted communities and Tribal Nations instead of requiring the developers, who are best positioned to address those harms, to mitigate the risks.

4. Are you exaggerating the threats to all American communities of the bad precedent that BOEM is setting?

No. The law firm representing us is the foremost firm in the United States dealing with enforcement of the National Historic Preservation Act and applicable sections of the National Environmental Policy Act. They have resolved numerous, high-profile cases on behalf of all types of communities (small, large, rich, poor, white, indigenous, Black, and other underserved communities.) being harmed by all types of industrial projects (from pipelines to data centers). Our advisors see, and we agree, that there is a direct line between BOEM’s failures in these projects and the strategies that other industries will take to speed projects through permitting with improper review. Our firm has been warning the President’s Advisory Council on Historic Preservation about this concern for several years, through multiple administrations, regardless of the party in power.

5. What are the risks to Newport?

For at least the next 30 years Newport will be home to an industrialized ocean landscape with hundreds of turbines three times taller than the Statue of Liberty.

Newport is known as the “City by the Sea” and Rhode Island is “The Ocean State.” An industrialized ocean viewshed will alter for at least 30 years one of the main reasons that people from around the world visit Newport. Our natural Atlantic Ocean environment and views give us our sense of place – which is valued not just by occupants of our famous big mansions but by millions of people who journey here and keep coming back. To say that this character-defining and economy-driving asset must be sacrificed because of the pressing needs for green energy is to present a false choice. There are countless ways to address climate change, including offshore wind. Unfortunately, the position large developers have adopted with BOEM’s illegal consent is this: it is our way or nothing. The developer’s proposal is the cheapest way for them to build the wind farms, but it isn’t the only way.

Developer Orsted’s own study found that 15% of visitors would not return to an Atlantic coastal community once turbines became visible. BOEM’s and the developer’s own analysis demonstrates that the visual effects on Newport and Block Island from Revolution Wind alone will be “major” because National Historic Landmarks in these communities – including Bellevue and Ocean Drive Historic Districts – are within 12.7 miles of the closest turbines. Cumulative Historic Resources Visual Effects Analysis—Revolution Wind and Revolution Wind Export Cable Project (Feb. 2022), at 39.

A loss of 15% of Newport’s heritage tourism economy would cost the community an estimated 5.17 billion dollars during the projects’ lifespan. That figure is not adjusted for inflation and does not count property value losses and related losses in tax revenue. Those lost billions pay for our schools, hospitals, roads, emergency responders, parks, and countless other public services. More than 8,000 local jobs—actual, currently existing blue-collar jobs, not those promised by the Developer—depend directly on our heritage tourism economy. Newport is willing to make sacrifices, just like every other community should be prepared to do to address climate change. BOEM should balance the threats to livelihood of the people who live here and the profits of multi-billion-dollar developers who are mostly foreign-owned companies who have probably never set foot in our community.

Other organizations can speak to BOEM’s abject failure to measure impact. For example, concerning fish populations on the continental shelf which is the fish “superhighway” BOEM’s response is that they will get to studying the harms to one of the world’s most important fishing zones after the farms are built.

6. Does The Preservation Society expect to stop the projects?

Our appeal does not seek to stop the projects. We expect the projects will be permitted responsibly, with fair consideration of alterations that can limit harms to the communities that bear the brunt of the impacts as federal law requires.

7. What is the Preservation Society hoping will come from the appeals?

The goal of the appeals is to have projects properly permitted, as BOEM should have done from the beginning. We do not want federal environmental laws that our communities depend on to be irresponsibly weakened. We hope that a court will order BOEM to accurately assess the impacts on Newport and mandate appropriate changes reflecting a realistic assessment of those harms.

8. Will the turbines be visible from Newport?

BOEM concedes that 457 turbines will be visible from Newport. The proposed industrialized farms will be highly visible. When the federal government allowed the lease areas for offshore wind to be determined a dozen years ago, it allowed communities to be misled into believing the turbines would be barely visible. This is untrue. BOEM admits this volume of proposed turbines will cause Newport harm but requires that Orsted do nothing about it – putting all risks on the community.

9. Is the Preservation Society against offshore wind?

No. We are proud supporters of green energy, but rushing the permitting process when there are many legitimate, unanswered questions about offshore wind’s adverse effects causes unnecessary risk of loss to our cultural heritage, our economy, the environment and our bedrock environmental laws. Indeed, the Society’s leadership includes persons who haven’t just talked the talk of environmental progress but have spent entire professional careers and civic lives as advocates for smart energy solutions.

10. What does the Preservation Society want?

We want a permitting review process that follows the law. We want laws that are not weakened under political or developer pressure. We want to educate the community on what it means to balance cultural and environmental preservation with clean energy development so that the two goals can be simultaneously pursued, which they are in other places in the United States and throughout the world. We find it regrettable that industry and BOEM have been feeding the public the idea that you cannot have both clean energy and preserved community character and local economies, in balance, because that is a false choice. We also regret that some narratives take the easy but unhelpful route of painting this need for balance in stark black and white terms (pro or against clean energy) instead of acknowledging the complexity of the issue and the ability to achieve aligned goals.

11. Is the Preservation Society saying that preserving their viewshed is more important than saving the Earth?

No. This is a false choice. First, just for perspective, one might consider that BOEM itself has determined that the effect of all of these wind farms if built exactly to developer specifications will have an impact on global warming reduction that is so small as to be impossible to measure. Those are BOEM’s conclusions, in small print, hidden at the back of one of their environmental assessments. We recognize that green energy projects must start somewhere, and that the symbolism of offshore energy is important in the movement. That said, clearly there are thousands of clean energy solutions required in every corner of the globe to be able to address our climate disaster. Are we to treat every developer’s proposal for every project as beyond question? Is anyone who dares to raise a hand and say, “Can’t we take a moment to consider how some of the anticipated and unanticipated harms of these projects should be more carefully considered?” to be labeled as indifferent to climate change? We deserve a more thoughtful dialogue.

12. Is this just about money?

No. Throughout BOEM’s flawed consultation process we have advocated for design changes such as removing rows of turbines, reducing the number of turbines, and reducing the size of turbines. Other measures such as using non-reflective paint and Aircraft Detection Lighting Systems (ADLS) have become industry standards; permitting review should start from there, not end there. Mitigation for adverse effects is one of the many ways that developers can assist a community to balance both the benefits and harm of development. BOEM has ignored all such input.

13. How do you respond to people who say viewsheds are a NIMBY concern and you care only about rich people’s views?

The importance of Newport’s National Historic Landmarks has nothing to do with market value or an owner’s net worth. These historic treasures speak to our history as Americans, and for that reason Federal law requires the highest level of protection. The Preservation Society is proud to be the steward of some of these landmarks for future generations, and to take action to ensure that laws to protect them, including their viewsheds, are enforced.

There are many places in Newport where people from all walks of life enjoy unobstructed ocean views, such as Newport’s famous Cliff Walk, Ocean Drive, and Brenton Point State Park. Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge in nearby Middletown has miles of trails bordering the ocean. Throughout the Ocean State are many beaches where the public come to relax and recreate – not to see an industrialized horizon with hundreds of wind turbines.

Every year millions of people come to Newport, many of them to see the world-famous Newport Mansions. Their visits power the local economy and provide employment for thousands of local residents. Orsted’s studies have indicated that over a thirty-year period, billions of visitor dollars will disappear from the local economy if their wind farms are built as planned.

14. What mitigation has been offered and why wasn’t that acceptable?

In the South Fork Wind Farm permitting process, The City of Newport was completely cut out and was offered no chance to provide input on project design measures that would mitigate harms. For the Revolution Wind Farm, BOEM proposed a hodgepodge of random projects, developed by the developer’s consultants, the community neither asked for nor needs. Further, these projects are not guaranteed and are absurdly inadequate compared to the scale of loss they will experience for the next 30 years. This result is because BOEM has skipped the legally required steps which accurately maps the harms and the adverse impacts. Sunrise Wind continues this pattern.

15. What is Section 106 of National Historic Preservation Act?

The primary historic preservation law at the federal level is the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA). With its passage by Congress in 1966, it became the nation’s most comprehensive preservation law, creating institutions to advance historic preservation goals and establishing a clearly defined process for historic preservation in the United States. Section 106 is a part of the NHPA that requires the government to identify historic properties and assess the adverse effects caused by the proposed development; adverse effects can be direct, indirect, or cumulative over time, and include visual effects that change a historic property’s context or setting. The Section 106 process requires federal agencies to consider these adverse effects, with the goal of finding ways to avoid, minimize, or mitigate harm to these properties through consultation with parties known as “consulting parties.” “Consulting parties” are individuals, governments (local, state, or Tribal), or entities that have a demonstrated economic or legal interest in a project’s outcome. The Preservation Society has participated as a “consulting party” in BOEM’s review of South Fork Wind, Revolution Wind, and Sunrise Wind but BOEM has ignored our comments. Read more here.

16. What is Section 110(f) of the National Historic Preservation Act?

Section 110(f) requires federal agencies in charge of permitting to use “all possible planning to minimize harm” to National Historic Landmarks, our nation’s most outstanding historic properties. Section 110(f) requires federal agencies to consult with the National Park Service, which administers the National Historic Landmarks Program, and requires a more heightened level of scrutiny than Section 106 because of the historic significance National Historic Landmarks represent. Newport has some of the nation’s most recognized National Historic Landmarks in the United States, including the Bellevue Avenue and Ocean Drive Historic Districts, and individual National Historic Landmarks within those districts. For links to the National Historic Preservation Act and regulations, see here and here.

17. What is NEPA?

NEPA, otherwise known as the National Environmental Policy Act, is the federal law passed by Congress to inform the American public about the effects of major government actions on all aspects of the human environment. NEPA provides procedural protections in permitting by requiring an analysis of adverse effects on the environment, which in addition to the natural environment includes historic and cultural resources as well as economic impacts. Under NEPA, a federal agency may not proceed with a proposed action until it performs an environmental review that includes meaningful consideration of alternatives to the proposed action that would avoid or have a less harmful impact. The review can either result in an Environmental Assessment or a more robust document known as an Environmental Impact Statement, if the federal agency determines that the proposed action will have a significant effect on the human environment. In either event, critical to the agency’s analysis is whether a proposed action will have a significant effect on historic or cultural resources. At issue may be the degree and the way a proposed action affects historic or cultural sites listed or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places, in addition to impacts on the natural environment, such as water, air, or fish and wildlife. Sometimes seemingly insignificant impacts, including visual intrusions, may rise to the level of a significant effect or cumulative impact when viewed collectively. Read more here in the Council on Environmental Quality’s Citizen’s Guide to NEPA.

Links to the NEPA statute and regulations are available here and here.

18. How can I stay updated on The Preservation Society’s appeals?

Track developments here: https://www.culturalheritagepartners.com/offshore-wind-appeals/

We have linked visualizations below:

1) A map of the currently proposed wind farms compared to distances from Newport, showing which projects will be visible. This map was prepared by our visualization expert.

2) The view from the balcony of the Breakers in Newport, showing Revolution Wind’s 65 turbines but not the almost 400 additional turbines that will be present if all of the currently proposed wind farms are built. Orsted prepared this visualization, which we contend has methodological problems, and we are engaging our own expert to render more accurate views.

3) The view from the Norman Bird Sanctuary in Middletown, RI, again showing only Revolution Wind’s 65 turbines and not the additional 392 turbines. Orsted prepared this visualization, which we contend has methodological problems, and we are engaging our own expert to render more accurate views.

Source:  Preservation Society of Newport County | November 30, 2023 | culturalheritagepartners.com

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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