Power Points from the Conference

To view the power point presentations from the Power of the Gulf conference click here: http://www.lawandinnovation.org/cli/events/agenda.php

Looking Forward: Gov. Angus King

Closing today's conference is former Governor Angus King, who is now developing his own wind power projects with a new company called Independence Wind.

He's opening with oil prices: in April he spoke at Bowdoin and marveled at $114/barrel oil. "Now it's $130 a barrel," says King (actually, it's up to $137 this afternoon). Fuel oil prices will have doubled by next winter. Big impact on individual Mainers. "Maine at $5 and $10 a gallon gasoline is uninhabitable, folks." [ed.: I don't know if I agree with this. Maine might become undriveable, but our state wasn't uninhabitable before the Model T. Our transportation bureaucracy needs to transform itself, too].

King asserts that Maine is the most oil-dependent state in the US (thanks to heating fuels plus over-reliance on motor vehicles).

In 1998, 4% of the avg. Maine family budget went to energy. King then proposed a 5 cent gas tax for road maintenance, a proposal that went down in flames thanks to resistance over price increases. Gasoline costs have increased $3 since then. Instead of paying for infrastructure, though, it's mostly going overseas: "We're funding both sides of the war on terror."

He calls for a national R&D initiative to fund offshore wind technology development.

Eisenhower re-took Europe in 9 months. "When FERC was presenting I added up all the time required for all of the permits required and I got 4.5 years," exclaims King. "I mean, come on."

As far as environmental impacts are, he encourages regulators to look to existing wind farms in Europe. By looking to existing wind farms, we should be able to create a reliable and robust regulatory framework and know impacts well enough for adaptive management.

Economic development results in Europe: 300,000 jobs created, and Vestas, a wind turbine manufacturer, is now the largest company in Denmark, King asserts.

Two recommendations:
  • Predetermine sites. Declare what sites are and are not OK for wind power development, instead of asking developers to "throw darts at a target we can't see."

  • Permit by rule. Lay out what the rules are and don't require massive applications for every project as if every one is unique. Say, "here's the noise standard, here's the standard for the footprint, etc."


King cites the TVA, a depression-era agency that now oversees 33,000 MW of (mostly hydropower) generation in the southern US. A public authority can remove financial and regulatory risks.

Serious consequences for for not acting are both human and environmental. Mainers need energy alternatives. And the climate needs relief from greenhouse gases.

But offshore wind will still take years to develop.

King ends with a quote from Abe Lincoln:

"The dogmas of a quiet past are inadequate to a stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise -- with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country."

More discussion: breaking the regulatory logjam, economic development opportunities

How do we provide incentives for offshore energy development? Can we afford it? John Kerry answers: if state govt. sets a framework and the guidance to demonstrate that renewables can be profitable, a good investment, we don't need incentives. The private market will do it on its own. Kerry is advising the Governor to create frameworks that allow private enterprises to thrive... renewable energy developers should be assured that the state's policies will support them in the long run.

Kerry also emphasizes the need to educate policymakers and entrepreneurs about the economic opportunities of energy development.

Elizabeth Butler is now standing up and expressing some frustration with the regulatory issues we've heard today. We have a "moral obligation" to develop renewables. Why, then, are we regulating these projects on an ad-hoc, project-by-project basis, just like any other project - the same way we'd regulate the construction of a Wal-Mart big-box store or a summer camp. What gives? Where's the action?

A fellow from Mass. Audubon responds: we need Legislative action, on state and federal levels. [Editor's note: is he saying that Legislators need to clear the bureaucratic logjam themselves? If so, maybe agencies like FERC, MMS, state planners, etc. should have a self-preservation interest in getting with the program and figure out their ideal, streamlined process before they're legislated out of the picture.]

The fellow from New Jersey is now talking about building the industrial base necessary to create offshore development: undersea engineering, exploration, etc. A new economic development opportunity.

Chris Sauer, Ocean Renewable Power Co.: People invest in startups when there's a clear path to commercialization. His company abandoned a project in Florida's Gulf Stream b/c of regulatory uncertainty with MMS. Also, Maine has a unique opportunity re: tidal power... no one has yet developed a commercial tidal turbine yet. It could happen here, [and Sauer's company is working on it] and Maine could potentially become an exporter of technology and equipment.

Regional renewable power opportunities and transmission grid

Here's that image from John Kerry's presentation this morning. This is a map of renewable power sources and potential sources, and high-voltage regional transmission lines. Click to enlarge:


Maine is a tabula rasa sitting in the middle of all these resources. Improved transmission infrastructure could put us in the middle of things, with cheaper electric rates and cleaner power sources.

Discussion

Afternoon discussion:

A woman stands up and talks about her film documentary project, which is following the development of tidal power here in Maine. She and a following speaker talk about the importance of education, the value and importance of renewable energy development.

A fellow from Vinalhaven's Fox Island Electric Cooperative speaks up: they're developing 4-5 MW nameplate capacity to power the islands. He notes that Hull has no NIMBY problems; Vinalhaven has minimal NIMBY problems because wind will diminish power rates significantly (the islands currently rely on expensive-to-maintain undersea cables, so transmission costs are nearly twice the cost of the electricity itself). Here's a research paper on the viability of utility wind power on the Fox Islands from the Renewable Energy Research Laboratory.

Another speaker suggests that developers sort through Maine communities according to who has the highest electric rates: go there first. People chuckle, but I think there's real validity in this sentiment.

Someone else stands up and cites everything said about regulation and public trust - the private sector is also an important institution, and he urged power developers to listen to the public - both neighbors and the public institutions in government.

A developer/fisherman working on an offshore project in New Jersey is talking about the need for regulatory consensus. In NJ, commercial fishermen opposed offshore wind at first, then engaged in a two-year dialogue; now, the same fishermen are engaged in the development proposal. [ed: pretty neat story; I'd read about this in the Wall Street Journal's excellent Environmental Capital blog a few days ago.]

Q and A: Politics and Outreach

One audience member brought up a point about energy units - nameplate capacity of wind power projects versus actual production of megawatt-hours (which depends on the wind blowing, for wind turbines). Of course, one of the strong arguments for offshore wind power is that turbines generate at or near their nameplate capacity for a greater proportion of the time.

Q: How should a power developer approach a community?
A: Three different panelists generally endorse reaching out to all members of the community first. Don't come in with an aura of invincibility, or of inevitability. Invite participation.

Q: An observation that Hull's two projects were developed by the town, without outside developers.
John Meschino: Wind power began with an experimental project at the high school. Then the municipal power company installed two utility-scale turbines that now generate about 10% of the town's power. Both turbines paid for with town money. The current project is much larger and thus will require outside financing.

Conflicts and Solutions: Politics and Fisheries

David Etnier of Maine's Dept. of Marine Resources opens his talk with a recollection of the proposal to site an LNG terminal in his hometown of Harpswell: "it started out divisive, became acrimonious, and on the day of the special election there were bomb threats called in to the polling place." Process is important; having "big amounts of money on the table brings out the worst in people."

He's also talking about the state's process in siting and approving leases for aquaculture projects - another relatively new phenomenon that required a new regulatory framework. He seconds Deerin Babb-Brott's comments on the importance of earning the public trust.

Will Hopkins, of the Cobscook Bay Resource Center in Eastport, focused on strengthening communtiy-based approaches to resource management. His organization includes the primary spokesman opposing LNG development in Passamaquoddy Bay, as well as the main proponent for the project from the tribe. "It got quite heated" in board meetings: the board recalled the extremely divisive Pittston oil refinery debate 30 years ago, and resolved that the organization would neither support or oppose the project, but provide good information on ecology and economic development in the area.

In eastern Maine, a recent study by the the Electric Power Research Institute estimated the potential for as much as a gigawatt of electricity. Besides Sauer's Ocean Renewable Power Co. (heard from earlier today), there are other proposals in the works as well: here's a 2006 Working Waterfront article on the EPRI study and another tidal power proposal.

Last but not least is John Meschino, a lobsterman from Hull, MA. They had their own LNG proposal recently - Meschino's daughter, chair of the board of selectmen, wrote to the developers and told them that if they could prove why their town needed them, they would open discussions. "The developers never came back," he says with some satisfaction. No bomb threats necessary. Pictured below: one of Hull's turbines with the Boston skyline beyond.



Hull has its own power company, which generates its own power with two onshore wind turbines. With research and feasibility study support from the state, Hull is now considering four additional ocean-based turbines, 1.5 miles east of Nantasket Beach. Here's a Globe article on the proposal. As a lobsterman, Meschino wonders about the effects of electromagnetic fields from ocean transmission lines on groundfish like lobsters.

Q&A - Conflicts and Solutions

Question: Might a sustained marketing effort convince people that turbines are beautiful as sustainable sources of energy?
Pete D.: Some will find them beautiful, others will find them threatening no matter what. A broad middle can be educated. Most importantly, people need to be aware of the problems of the status quo: exporting harm and air pollution to midwest coal power plants, Virginian Appalachian mountains, etcetera.


Question: Need to identify specific places, before the developer comes in, to say "this is where it's acceptable." Local cost and a global benefit [ed: which too frequently stymies these projects, since the minority harmed is much more vocal than the global majority who benefits: the tragedy of the commons problem].

Pete D.: Took a step towards this with the Gov. Task Force. In the ocean, it's potentially possible. Even in state expedited areas, conflicts will flare up.

Conflicts and Solutions: Birds, Carbon

After lunch, the panel discussion will docus on environmental risks and mitigation for offshore renewable projects. What role can collaborative community-based planning play?

First up is Stewart Fefer of the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Bird concentration areas, flyways, and seasonal nesting or breeding areas are of particular concern. Thousands of offshore surveys have been conducted in the Gulf of Maine thanks to interest in past decades in offshore oil exploration.

Over lunch I was able to download some images from the morning's presentations. Here's the previously-mentioned map of bird flight paths before and after an offshore wind project:



Fefer points out that birds' avoidance of turbines may be problematic if turbines block bird migration corridors.

Fefer's final recommendations to developers: Avoid bird concentration areas and mitigate by addressing other challenges to bird populations: overfishing of birds' food supplies, collisions between birds and ships, extirpation, etcetera.

Next up is Pete Didisheim of the Natural Resources Council of Maine. He's talking about the need to keep the big picture in mind - our obsolete energy infrastructure, our carbon emissions crisis, air toxins from coal burning - in addition to the consideration of little-picture impacts caused by construction of wind or ocean turbines.

NRCM: We need as much low-carbon generation as possible to lower the overall impact. Wind power is part of the solution.

Eight projects in the pipeline for Maine: two permitted and about to begin construction (Stetson and Kibby Mountain). Successful projects have mitigation strategies: Stetson appeased fishing guides by protecting a local watershed and contributing to a land trust; Kibby Mt. agreed to protect sensitive alpine zones nearby.

They're opening it up for questions after those two questions ... please comment if you'd like to participate from wherever you are.

Maine Task Force on Wind Power: Alec Giffen

Alec Giffin, of Governor Baldacci's Task Force on Wind Power, is now speaking of his experience as a forester on that task force. He also alludes to the problems of old regulatory structures being applied to renewable energy development: he notes that Maine's Land Use Regulation Commission, which has presided over most of Maine's wind-power siting debates so far, created its zoning regulations decades before wind power existed.

Several problems: Existing regulations require all wind power projects (which typically go on top of mountain ridges) must "fit harmoniously with the natural environment."

If in the jurisdiction of the Land Use Regulation Commission, the planning board for Maine's unincorporated forestlands, the development district has to be "equally protective" of resources as conservation areas.

These regulations introduced tremendous unpredictability and uncertainty to wind power developers seeking permits. The task force, convened to make Maine a leader in wind power development, sought to update the state's regulations to allow for expedited permitting.

Read the Task Force's report here:
http://maine.gov/doc/mfs/windpower/report.shtml

The Legislature passed an implementation policy for the task force's recommendations almost unanimously this past winter.

Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act Office: Deerin Babb-Brott

Deerin Babb-Brott of Massachusetts's Environmental Policy Office is up next. He grew up down the road in Camden.

He begins with two points:

Regulations need context.

This is not about science and technology, but about public trust.

I suspect that the latter point might have grown out of his state's experience with Cape Wind. The former, I hope, is a reference to some bureaucrats' and activists' tendency to lose the big-picture value of renewable projects: sure, a wind turbine might disturb a few square meters of ocean floor, but it's also displacing the need to burn tons of fossil fuels somewhere else upwind from us. I'm reminded of people here in Maine who treat land-based wind power projects as though they were equivalent to Wal-Mart stores, and protest the projects based on the fact that wind turbine construction requires the removal of some trees and the reconstruction of some logging roads.

He notes that MA has resolved differences and gained the public's trust for two new liquefied LNG terminals, thanks to extraordinary mitigation measures. Wind power projects have not successfully gained the public trust, even though most would probably agree that wind power is environmentally preferable to burning natural gas.

Gov. Patrick signed the MA Oceans Act of 2008 a few weeks ago: a comprehensive plan for state waters management, support renewable energy development, and balance natural resource preservation with traditional and new uses. A plan will be drafted by summer 2009, with final plan scheduled to be complete by Dec. 31, 2009.

NOAA and Fisheries presentation

Now someone from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is pinch-hitting a presentation about marine fisheries regulations. He begins with a slide with seven or eight different laws that govern NOAA's evaluation of marine power projects.

He says that his agency's main need in evaluating ocean energy projects is more information on how renewable energy projects affect marine environments. He repeats a recurring theme from these agencies: we're still learning how to regulate these kinds of projects.

The big, overarching regulation is NEPA, the National Environmental Policy Act. NEPA typically requires an Environmenal Assessment or Impact Statement for major projects in the federal government's jurisdiction.

NEPA requires the collection of good baseline data, along with an evaluation of all the probable effects and impacts that a project will have. These might include invasive species, noise, or alteration of hydrology, temperature, or salinity.

"[In] our review of the Cape Wind project... we didn't have a tremendous number of concerns about that project. Offshore wind projects may be a rather benign activity in terms of impact on fisheries. But we don't know what kind of impacts they'll have once they're built. We'll see once they're in the water."

"Quality data needs to be collected before, during and after project installation."

FERC presentation

Now it's FERC's turn to present, with Kristen Murphy here from Washington, DC to represent the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. She points out the fact that FERC licenses hydropower projects, which include wave generators and tidal turbines, but not wind turbines.

She's describing FERC's permitting and license process now. Steel yourself for some hardcore bureaucracy: first FERC offers a preliminary permit for feasibility studies and to let the project developers move forward with financing, etc. Then, presuming all the t's are crossed and the i's are dotted, FERC issues a final permit authorizing construction. You also need an operating license, as with hydro dams, which are renewed every 30-50 years.

No license is required for experimental, short-term studies that don't transmit into the grid. The Roosevelt Island tidal power project in the East River satisfied these criteria during its testing phase, so no license was needed.

As with MMS, FERC is still trying to figure out its position and authority re: wave and tidal energy projects. They're also very open to collaboration with the industry (says Murphy the FERC employee).

Here's FERC's white paper on FERC's hydrokinetic pilot project licensing.

MMS presentation

Maureen Bornholdt manages the federal government's Minerals Management Service's alternative energy program. She's discussing the agency's interim policy on offshore renewable energy development. MMS typically leases federal offshore waters for oil and gas development; recent interest in offshore renewable technology has led MMS to adopt a new, interim policy to govern short-term leases for renewable energy projects. When a comprehensive long-term policy is finalized, MMS will offer longer-term commercial leases for offshore projects.

MMS has also designated offshore regions as priority areas for offshore renewable energy research, and has already received applications for 16 projects in those waters. The closest one to us in Maine is in the Cape Cod channel, where tidal currents may make underwater tidal current turbines commercially feasible.

Bornholdt emphasizes that their agency is expediting the process to approve a finalized policy.

Open Thread - Submit your questions and comments

If you're reading from your office or home and you have any questions or issues you'd like to bring up, submit them in the comments here and I'll do my best to pass them along to today's panelists (and I'll post the responses in the comments here as well).

The next two panels will focus on the regulatory environment, with representatives from state and federal government agencies, then a panel on "conflicts and solutions" after lunch, with panelists from NRCM, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the Dept. of Marine Resources, and from the fisheries industry.

Fire away!

More renewable energy blogs

More links of interest while we take our first break this morning:

Economic Development

A second panel question asked about the jobs impact in rural Washington County.

Sauer points out that in rural communities, adding a few new construction or maintenance jobs can have the same relative impact as hundreds of jobs in greater Portland. This new investment and activity helps maintain Eastport's social fabric and instills a sense of economic opportunity.

Mandelstam: European wind industry businesspeople have told him that as soon as the US adopts a consistent and regular policy for offshore wind development, then European companies will invest in and build new projects, providing potentially thousands of local fabrication and marine construction jobs.

Governor for the Day?

A question for the previous three presenters: given that an energy emergency exists, and we have a "moral authority" for this kind of economic development, what would you do to make it happen, if you were governor for a day?

Mandelstam: Bring people together. Decide whether we're going to have turbines near shore? If there's a crisis, are we willing to have turbines visible from our islands? Think about and agree whether we can allow and approve (with streamlined permitting) ocean-based turbines. Also force negotiations to get power companies to contract to purchase clean power, without subsidy.

Sauer: Agrees with Peter. Brings up other stakeholders as well: the fishing industry. Also address transmission issues - investing in the grid, bringing in system operators and delivery companies.

Sean: If I were governor, I would have a cabinet-level position for new and emerging technologies, and a task force (including the previously-mentioned stakeholders), applying the principles of adaptive management to find solutions and get projects in the water.

Chris Sauer, Ocean Renewable Power Co.

Sauer is developing two tidal power projects in western Maine with Ocean Renewable Power. He cites excellent relationships with the local community, the Passamaquoddy Tribe, and the economic development potential (which is particularly important is rural eastern Maine - Washington Co. is Maine's poorest county).

Sauer also refers to the complications of regulation. Most significantly, he says, the complicated regulatory framework creates uncertainty for investors, and makes venture capital funding especially difficult to acquire. Ocean Renewable Power, as a tidal power development company, is involved in both technological research and development (refining new tidal technology) and in developing commercial power projects in the Bay of Fundy.

He also thanks and cites the helpfulness and collaboration received from Maine's DEP and the Army Corps of Engineers. "We were able to obtain permits in record time."

Sauer closed his presentation with a video of his company's first tidal turbine in Eastport.

Sean O'Neill, Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition

O'Neill covers some similar points - ocean power's proximity to consumers, the complexity of regulations. His major point was about the twin agency mandates of FERC and MMS (the Minerals Management Service), both of which have jurisdiction over ocean energy development. Both agencies would like to help develop offshore power, but having both involved complicates regulatory hurdles significantly and generates considerable uncertainty.

www.oceanrenewable.com/.

Peter Mandelstam, Bluewater Wind

Mendelstam works for Bluewater Wind, a company working on developing an offshore project 11 miles off the coast of Delaware. He notes the increasing acceptance and respect his company is getting from the larger energy industry.

Peter kicks things off with a densely-packed slide of text - all of the regulatory hurdles and permits necessary to complete an offshore project. He says this isn't necessarily a problem - in the end, all of these studies will prove the worthiness of an offshore project. But the vetting process could stand to be streamlined.

He also put up a striking slide - can't find the picture on the web, unfortunately - of bird flight paths before and after an offshore wind project in Denmark. Before, flight paths were random and scattered throughout the monitoring area. After, birds' paths followed diagonal paths through the wind farm. "Birds aren't stupid," says Mandelstam. They know how to avoid turbines. He cites studies that find fewer than 1 bird strike per turbine per year. More important than individual birds, though, is the viability of entire bird populations at risk thanks to climate change, mercury, and other fossil-fuel externalities.

His proposed project in Chesapeake Bay could have a $200 million -plus direct economic impact for Delaware workers.

Deepwater offshore wind rigs

I have a certain fascination with deepwater offshore oil rigs, so I'm pretty excited about Musial's presentation and his discussion of various offshore, deepwater wind turbine technologies.



Musial didn't mention this in his presentation, but deepwater wind turbine research owes a lot to offshore oil rig technology. In fact, the world's first deepwater wind turbine, the Beatrice demonstration project in Scotland, is being developed by a Scottish oil company adjacent to one of their offshore oil fields. Like an offshore oil rig, the 5 MW turbine will be perched atop a 40 meter stage.



The turbine itself is also huge - compare the turbine blades in the photo above to the vans parked next to it in the upper-right corner. Big turbines that generate a lot of power are necessary to justify the huge capital investment in deepwater construction.

Here's a BBC news article with photos of the turbine floating out to sea.

But, just as deepwater oil rigs are now using floating platforms in deeper water, so offshore wind turbines will someday float on the surface, tethered to the bottom a hundred meters beneath.



Again, an oil company is leading the way in this technology: Norway's Statoil is developing Hywind (pictured), a floating turbine that can live in deep water and withstand punishing weather.

Musial wrap-up

Musial is confident that deepwater technology will converge on a preferred, cost-effective engineering solution in the near future.

Dept. of Energy predicts that wind power will provide 20% of US energy by 2030. Offshore wind will need to be a part of that target.

In conclusion: 100 companies are now pursuing wind and tidal energy projects - no tech. conversion yet exists. No commercial projects, either - will require capital investments.

Shallow water wind will develop first, then deepwater, offshore wind. But the technology will need to converge first.

Walter Musial, National Renewable Energy Labs

Musial comes to us from Golden, CO. His talk is going to focus on some of the available and emerging ocean-based energy technologies.

He begins with a population density map of the continental US. Of course, most of the nation's biggest cities and population clusters are coastal (or near the Great Lakes).

He begins with a discussion of some of the "hydrokinetic" technology under development. Because the technology is new, a number of different designs are being tested - there are open rotors that look like underwater wind turbines, as well as smaller units shrouded in tubes.

Wave energy is even more diverse in design. The Pelamis is a "floating snake" that compresses and pumps hydraulic fluid through a turbine as a wave runs along its length. Others use floating buoys (pictured) in which a wave moves a magnet up and down through a coil to create current. Breakwater-like "terminator" generators collect and focus wave energy into a single, central turbine.

Onto offshore wind: advantages include no visual complaints, and easier to transport huge rotors by sea than by road.

1135 MW of offshore wind power are installed in Europe - mostly in GB and Denmark. Targets are 40 GW by 2020, 150 GW by 2030. Offshore projects can utilize huge turbines: 5 megawatt turbines are going up in Scotland.

Cost factors include turbine supply, construction costs, exchange rates (the weak dollar makes turbine technology more affordable in Europe).

Offshore projects in development: about a dozen projects proposed, none built yet. There are essentially only 2 firms that can supply offshore equipment: Siemens and Vestas. Both are European companies (another strike against us, with our weak dollar).

Maine has 133 gigawatts in potential deep-water offshore turbine development. 6.4 gigawatts in shallow water (0 to 30 meters deep). So far, technology only exists for fixed-foundation turbines in water up to 30 meters deep. Deepwater technology would probably rely on floating-platform technology.

Questions for John Kerry

A couple of questions from people wondering about the state's official policiies:

One woman asked if Maine was considering a feed-in tariff for renewables. The answer is no.

Someone else asked whether the state was encouraging offshore development in state waters, closer to shore, or in federal waters further out. Kerry's answer was essentially "both," though he cautioned that onshore or nearshore development would be more difficult thanks to NIMBYs.

John Kerry, Office of Energy Independence

John Kerry, the director of Maine’s Office of Energy Independence and Security, is now speaking, starting out with arguments about why Maine, a small state, still has a role and a responsibility in the global climate crisis.

He's declaring the interests of energy policy in economic development policy. He's presenting a 50-year vision: here in 2008, we're inside of a "fossil culture." He's envisioning a transition to a "conservation culture" by 2015. Dramatic increases in fuel costs, 80% - 100%, are already helping that transition, of course.

Kerry also talks about the importance of improving transmission infrastructure. Huge renewable projects are happening in the Maritime provinces to our north: we're in the middle of these projects, but our existing transmission grid still puts Maine at the "end of the line."

As energy prices increase, the economic development potential of conservation and efficiency programs becomes stronger. Kerry mentions Katahdin Paper, and the potential of developing a cutting-edge "trigeneration" (electricity, heating, and cooling) power plant there. He estimates the payback for such a project at 5 years.

The state is still pursuing biofuels - Kerry makes an important distinction that we're researching cellulosic ethanol made from wood pulp. While this is less harmful than corn-based ethanol, I still have my doubts, personally. A recent study from Iowa ag economists declared that cellulosic ethanol may never be commercially viable. Here's an alternative, more optimistic view from biofuels investor Vinod Khosla.

Here's a looming problem: Maine is 80% dependent on fossil oil for heating. Kerry has a target to bring Maine's proportion of heating by oil down to 25%. He mentions the formation of an ironically-named "Pre-Emergency" task force on the costs of heating oil in Maine (I think that many people would argue that it's too late for a "pre" emergency task force).

Kerry just put up a map of regional wind development sites and transmission lines, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to James Bay to New York. Maine is a big blank white space in the middle, scattered with potential sites for wind power development. I'll try to find another copy of the map to post here in a moment...

Kerry wraps by citing his experience with the Catholic Charities of Maine, and telling us that Maine has a "moral obligation" to help Mainers address these energy problems.

Links of (my) interest

Hi all - I'm C. Neal McNeil, and I'll be blogging today's "Power of the Gulf" conference on ocean energy in Maine. I typically blog at The Vigorous North, a field guide to urban wilderness areas, and for my day job I am the communications director for GrowSmart Maine, a grassroots advocacy organization seeking to grow Maine's economy while also preserving our quality of place.

While we're waiting for things to get started here, I'm going to share some links to other blogs, articles, and sites that interest me and relate, in some way or another, to what I expect people to talk about today:


Last but not least, here's the Daily Show's take on NIMBYism and offshore energy:

Agenda

8:30-8:45 a.m. Welcome
Rita Heimes, Center for Law & Innovation
Laura Taylor Singer, Gulf of Maine Research Institute

8:45-9:15 a.m. Maine's Energy Needs and Opportunities
John Kerry, Office of Energy Independence and Security

9:45-10:30 a.m. Development and Approval Process
What are the most significant impediments to offshore renewable development and what are top priority needs to launch offshore renewable energy projects within near term?
Sean O'Neill, Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition
Peter Mandelstam, Bluewater Wind
Chris Sauer, Ocean Renewable Power Company
Elizabeth Butler, Pierce Atwood (moderator)

10:30-11:00 a.m. Break

11:00-12:30 The Regulatory Environment
What are the regulatory requirements for developing offshore wind or tidal energy and what can be done to facilitate the process?
Alec Giffen, Governor's Task Force on Wind Power
Maureen Bornholdt, Minerals Management Service
Kristen Murphy, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Michael Johnson, National Marine Fisheries Service
Deerin Babb-Brott, Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act Office
Kathleen Leyden, Maine Coastal Program, State Planning Office (moderator)

12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch

1:30-3:00 p.m. Conflicts and Solutions
What are the key environmental risks associated with offshore wind or tidal energy projects? What potential marine use conflicts need to be considered in developing offshore wind or tidal energy projects? What role can collaborative, community-based planning play?
Stewart Fefer, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Peter Didisheim, Natural Resources Council of Maine
David Etnier, Maine Department of Marine Resources
Will Hopkins, Cobscook Bay Resource Center
John Meschino, Lobsterman, Hull, MA
Laura Taylor Singer, Gulf of Maine Research Institute (moderator)

3:00-3:20 p.m. Break

3:20-4:30 p.m. Participant Discussion

4:30-5:15 p.m. Looking Forward
Honorable Angus King, Jr.

Biographies of Speakers

Deerin Babb-Brott

Director, Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act Office

Deerin Babb-Brott has 18 years of experience in the environmental field, with a focus on coastal management issues and environmental impact review. As Assistant Secretary and Director of the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act at the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, he manages the environmental review of all major development projects in the Commonwealth, establishes the scope of such reviews, evaluates the adequacy of environmental impact reports, and, for offshore projects including wind and LNG, negotiates compensatory mitigation. Before joining MEPA, he worked in the MA Office of Coastal Zone Management, serving most recently as the Assistant Director for Planning and Coastal Development. While at CZM, Deerin served in the Coastal States Organization and on the Department of Interior’s Outer Continental Shelf Policy Committee, contributing to national policy discussions on the Coastal Zone Management Act, energy facility siting, and proposed regulations to manage alternative uses of OCS resources. Before joining CZM, he worked as the coastal planner for the Southern Maine Regional Planning Commission. Deerin has a BA in Government and Environmental Studies from Bowdoin College.

Maureen Bornholdt

Program Manager, Minerals Management Service

The passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 created new responsibilities for the Minerals Management Service (MMS), including becoming the lead Federal agency permitting authority for alternative energy-related uses on the Outer Continental Shelf. In August 2005, Maureen Bornholdt was selected to serve as the Project Manager to develop the Alternative Energy/Alternate Use Program for the MMS. Maureen has extensive experience in environmental regulation and compliance having worked offshore oil and gas issues for the Department of the Interior since 1983. Prior to her selection as Project Manager, she managed the Marine Minerals Program, a program presently focused on making available suitable sand deposits in Federal waters for wetlands protection and beach nourishment projects. Maureen has served as the MMS’s technical expert on Coastal Zone Management and National Environmental Policy Acts and as the program analyst covering offshore environmental and regulatory issues for the Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management. She earned a B.S. degree in Public Administration from George Mason University in Virginia.


Elizabeth Butler

Partner, Pierce Atwood, LLP

Elizabeth “Lib” Butler returned to Pierce Atwood after serving for four years as Chief Counsel to Maine Governor Angus King. As Chief Counsel, Elizabeth was responsible for managing all legal matters pending before the Office of the Governor and served as a member of the Governor’s senior management team. At Pierce Atwood, Lib assists businesses with start-up and expansion projects by providing the full range of legal services needed by growing companies, including advice on the most efficient use of Maine’s economic development incentives, streamlining the process for environmental, land use, and other governmental approvals, and related tax planning, employment, and intellectual property issues. Prior to joining the Governor’s staff, she practiced at Pierce Atwood from 1985-1994. Lib also served as an Assistant Attorney General in the Maine Attorney General’s Office Natural Resources Division. Lib received her B.A. from Smith College and her J.D. from the University of Maine School of Law. Following law school she was a law clerk to the Honorable Shane Devine, Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire.

Peter Didisheim

Director of Advocacy, Natural Resources Council of Maine

Pete joined the Natural Resources Council of Maine in 1996. Among numerous governmental positions, Pete has been chief of staff for U.S. Congressman George Brown, Jr. (D-CA), special assistant to U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Hazel R. O'Leary, and executive director of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board. Pete has worked for other nonprofits and serves on the board of the Maine League of Conservation Voters. He holds a B.A. from Williams College in biology and environmental studies and a master’s in public administration from Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government.

David Etnier

Deputy Commissioner, Maine Department of Marine Resources

David Etnier was appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Maine Department of Marine Resources on February 28, 2003. David has a long affiliation with the Department serving in the Legislature for the past eight years; six on the Joint Standing Committee on Marine Resources; four of those years as House Chair. David has vast experience in fisheries issues having served as a Commissioner of Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and as the Legislative member of Lobster Zone F. He has served as a chief engineer and as a stern man on various fishing vessels, and holds a U.S. Coast Guard Master’s license. Prior to his Legislative years, David worked in commercial photography and owned and operated a foreign and antique auto repair shop.


Stewart Fefer

Fish & Wildlife Biologist and Project Leader, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

As Project Leader for the Gulf of Maine Program Office of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Stewart Fefer works closely with multi-state, local and federal agencies and private groups aimed at the restoration, enhancement and protection of fish and wildlife habitats in the Gulf of Maine. Since he joined U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1978, Stewart has held several positions within the agency, including with the Office of Environment and Office of Realty in Massachusetts, and the Office of Refuges and Wildlife in Hawaii. In recent years he has served as an advisor with the Gulf of Honduras Exchange Program, the USAID International Technical Assistance Program, and the USAID Department of Interior Technical Assistance Program. He also currently acts as the Northeast Region’s Liaison to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation. After earning his M.S. in Wildlife Management from the University of Maine in 1976, Stewart worked as a Research Assistant with the Maine State Planning Office. He has a B.S. in Natural Sciences from Bard College in Annandale, New York, and has earned many professional awards and publications during his productive career.

Alec Giffen

Director, Maine Forest Service; Governor's Task Force on Wind Power

As Director of the Maine Forest Service, Alec Giffen has over 35 years of experience in natural resource planning and program administration in both government service and the private sector. While in government service, Alec served as Director of the Maine Land Use Regulation Commission (LURC) and the Natural Resource Planning Division of the Maine State Planning Office. In these positions, he had primary responsibility for the Maine Coastal Zone Management Program, Maine's Water Resources Policy Program, and as Director of LURC – regulation of land and water use on over ten million acres of Maine's Wildlands. As a private consultant, Alec worked with private parties, state and federal agencies, local governments, and conservation interests to resolve disputes over land management and facility licensing. Alec has also served as an arbitrator on environmental disputes, and assisted in crafting public policy that balances economic development and conservation interests. He has a M.S. from the University of California, with emphasis in ecology, and a B.S. in Forest Science from the University of Maine.

Rita S. Heimes

Director of the Center for Law and Innovation, University of Maine School of Law

Rita Heimes joined the Center for Law & Innovation in January 2001. Under her leadership, the Center has become the state's resource for education, research and convening around legal issues pertaining to innovation and economic development. Rita is a Research Professor at the law school where she teaches courses in copyright and trademark law. She was Visiting Assistant Professor of Law in the Global Technology Law LLM program at Suffolk University Law School during the 2003-2004 academic year. Following law school, she clerked with the Honorable Robert Beezer of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and practiced law with firms in Seattle, Boulder and Portland. Rita received her B.A. in Journalism with honors and highest distinction from the University of Iowa, and a J.D. with honors from Drake University Law School.

Will Hopkins

Executive Director, Cobscook Bay Resource Center

Will Hopkins is the founder & Executive Director of the Cobscook Bay Resource Center, a non-profit organization whose mission is to encourage and strengthen community-based approaches to resource management and sustainable economic development in the Cobscook Bay region, the Bay of Fundy, and the Gulf of Maine. Cobscook Bay has the last good scallop fishing grounds left in the State of Maine. The Resource Center helped local fishermen organize the Cobscook Bay Fishermen’s Association and develop scallop conservation measures. Will has facilitated conversations between Cobscook fishermen and various energy developers. The Resource Center has just completed a five year research project mapping the currents of Cobscook Bay and is acting as a clearinghouse for information on the three tidal power projects planned for the area. A native of Northaven, Will now lives in Eastport with his wife and youngest son.

Michael R. Johnson

Marine Habitat Resource Specialist and Team Leader for Gloucester Field Office, National Marine Fisheries Service

Mike Johnson has been the Marine Habitat Resource Specialist and Team Leader for the Gloucester Field Office of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) since 2002. His duties include reviewing and assessing federal coastal development projects and permit applications, and working to coordinate state and regional efforts aimed at coastal zone restoration, enhancement and development. Prior to his Gloucester post Mike worked as a Fishery Biologist for NMFS’s Southeast Region in the Miami Area Office. He also worked for seven years as a Marine Research Associate at the Florida Marine Research Institute, a unit of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Mike is has been a Scientific Diver with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Dive Program since 1999. He holds a M.S. degree in Biology from the University of Central Florida.

John Kerry

Director of the Office of Energy Independence and Security

John Kerry is the director of Maine’s Office of Energy Independence and Security. John has extensive experience in the public and private sector, and an impressive background in the energy and environmental fields. He served two terms in the state Senate, where he chaired the Utilities Committee. He also served one term in the state House of Representatives. From 1983 to 1986, John was the Executive Director of the Maine Office of Energy Resources in the Brennan Administration. In addition to his work in government, Kerry has been a successful businessman, including ownership stakes in a real estate company, two restaurants and an energy services company. John has a master’s degree in public administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and a master’s degree in planning from Boston College.


Angus King, Jr.

Former Governor of Maine; Of Counsel, Bernstein Shur

Angus King, Jr. began his career in 1969 as a staff attorney for Pine Tree Legal Assistance in Skowhegan, Maine and became Chief Counsel in 1973 to the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Alcoholism and Narcotics in the office of then-Senator William D. Hathaway. Angus returned to private practice law in 1975 with the firm of Smith, Loyd and King in Brunswick, Maine. In the same year, he began his eighteen-year career as host and co-producer of public affairs programming on Maine Public Broadcasting Network. In 1983, Angus became Vice President and General Counsel of Swift River/Hafslund Company, an alternative energy development company based in Portland and Boston. In 1989, he founded and served as President of Northeast Energy Management, Inc., a developer of large-scale energy conservation projects at commercial and industrial facilities in central and southern Maine. Angus was elected Maine's 71st Governor in 1994 and was reelected in 1998 by one of the largest margins of victory in the state's history. In addition to his current responsibilities as an attorney at Bernstein Shur, Angus is a member of several profit and non-profit boards and commissions, teaches part-time at Bowdoin College, and was recently a Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Politics at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He holds a B.A from Dartmouth College and a J.D. from the University of Virginia Law School.

Kathleen Leyden

Director, Maine Coastal Program at the State Planning Office

Kathleen Leyden is the Director of the Maine Coastal Program at the State Planning Office. The Coastal Program helps to balance the protection and sound development of Maine’s coast through technical assistance to coastal towns, local grant programs for public access, volunteer stewardship projects and sustainable economic development pilot projects. Kathleen has been at the State Planning Office for sixteen years, serving in several different positions within the Coastal Program, including Stewardship Coordinator and Watershed Planner. Prior to joining the staff of the State Planning Office, Kathleen was a Senior Land Use Planner at the Greater Portland Council of Governments and the Planning Director for the City of Saco, Maine. She has a Masters Degree in Urban and Regional Planning from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a B.A. in Environmental Studies from the State University of New York College at Plattsburgh.


Peter Mandelstam

Founder and President, Bluewater Wind

Peter Mandelstam first entered the wind industry providing consulting on project financing, leveraging his experience in real estate development. Peter worked with Atlantic Renewable Energy Corporation in securing financing for the 30MW Fenner project, New York's third wind farm. In 1997, Peter formed Arcadia Wind Power, which developed the 181 MW Judith Gap project, Montana's first wind farm. Today Arcadia holds a portfolio of wind project assets located throughout the country, and is the parent company of Bluewater Wind. Peter has also been a leader in the wind industry on the advocacy and policy front, serving on the Board of the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) for eight years, co-founding and chairing Wind Power New York (now ACENY.org), and actively supporting successful efforts for a Renewable Portfolio Standard in New York and New Jersey. Peter is currently Chair of AWEA's Offshore Wind Working Group. Peter attended Harvard University and began his career as a project manager for the City of New York, building and preserving affordable housing.

John Meschino

Lobsterman, Hull, Massachusetts

John Meschino graduated from Boston College in 1961 and became a school teacher, a job he held for 25 years. He has also been a commercial lobsterman for “too long” – at least since the early 1970s. John lives in Hull, Massachusetts, where he is a member of the Hull Conservation Commission and the treasurer and former president of the Hull Commercial Fisherman’s Association.

Kristen Murphy

Environmental Biologist, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

Kristen Murphy is an Environmental Biologist in the Division of Hydropower Licensing, Office of Energy Projects at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. With four years of experience in conventional hydropower project licensing, she is also a member of the FERC team working to address the appropriate regulation of hydrokinetic projects, including wave and tidal hydropower. In this capacity, Kristen led FERC’s initial outreach to hydrokinetic developers, resource agencies, and other interested stakeholders by coordinating two technical conferences in 2006 and 2007. She continues to participate in updating FERC’s policy in response to the developing hydrokinetic industry. Kristen holds a bachelor’s degree in Biology from the College of William and Mary and is currently working towards an M.S. in Environmental Science and Policy from Johns Hopkins University.


Walter Musial

Senior Engineer, National Wind Technology Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratories

Walt Musial is a Principal Engineer at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) where he has worked for almost twenty years. Walt leads the Ocean Renewable activities at NREL including wind, wave, and water current energy technologies. He serves on the International Energy Agency’s Ocean Energy Systems Executive Committee, and is the Technical Administrator for the U.S. Technical Advisory Group to the International Electro-technical Commission’s standards committee on marine renewable energy. Previously, he led the testing team at NREL’s National Wind Technology Center and was responsible for building and operating NREL’s full-scale component facilities for testing wind turbine blades and drive-trains. Earlier, Walt was employed for 5 years in the commercial wind energy industry in California. His career interests were solidified when he began studying renewable energy engineering at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where he earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Mechanical Engineering.

Sean O'Neill

Co-Founder & President, Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition

Sean O’Neill is co-founder and president of the Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition. He is also founder and principal of Symmetrix Public Relations & Communication Strategies where he serves the non-profit, energy, and human resources industries. Prior to founding Symmetrix, Sean served as Director of Public Affairs for U.S. Generating Company. He has directed communications and public affairs programs in 18 states supporting the development of over 8,000 megawatts of electric power generation. Sean has served numerous non-profit and governmental organizations in developing programs to encourage the development of ocean renewable technologies, electric industry deregulation, water conservation, municipal solid waste management and public safety contributing to broad public policy changes at state and federal levels, increased water and energy conservation, recycling, and seat belt use. He has a Masters in Public Communications from American University an A.B. degree in English from Columbia College in New York.

Peter Pitegoff

Dean, University of Maine School of Law


Peter Pitegoff is Dean and Professor at the University of Maine School of Law in Portland, Maine. He previously was on the faculty of the University at Buffalo Law School (SUNY) for seventeen years, the last seven as Vice Dean for Academic Affairs. He has worked, taught, and written extensively in the areas of economic development, labor and industrial organization, nonprofit corporations, employee ownership and alternative enterprise forms, welfare and employment policy, urban revitalization, and ethics, and he founded a law school clinical program in community economic development law which has served as a model for transactional clinics at a number of law schools. Peter is a 1975 graduate of Brown University and a 1981 graduate of New York University School of Law, where he was as a Root-Tilden scholar.

Don Perkins

President, Gulf of Maine Research Institute

Don Perkins became GMRI’s President in 1995. Don works with GMRI’s board of directors and management team to drive GMRI’s evolution as a strategic science, education, community institution serving the Gulf of Maine bioregion. Don brings an unusual mix of private sector and not-profit sector experience to GMRI. Prior to joining GMRI, he instructed at the Hurricane Island Outward Bound School, directed the Marine Conservation Corps in California, served as a financial advisor to Native American tribes; and managed the operations of Binax, Inc. Don has been active in the marine policy arena on multiple levels. He served on the boards of the Gulf of Maine Council on the Marine Environment, the Maine Department of Marine Resources Advisory Council, and the Maine Legislature’s Task Force on the Development of Aquaculture. He currently serves on the boards of the Maine Marine Research Coalition, Gulf of Maine Lobster Foundation, Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System, and Westbrook School Board. Don holds a B.A. in Anthropology from Dartmouth College and a M.B.A. from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business.

Christopher R. Sauer

President and Chief Executive Officer, Ocean Renewable Power Company

Chris Sauer has over more than 30 years of experience in the facility development, electricity, cogeneration, renewable energy and energy efficiency industries. He has a proven track record of success in executive management, engineering/construction, technology development, transaction structuring, marketing and sales and start-up company management. Chris has held senior management positions with two major U.S. corporations and has been President and CEO of three startup energy/environmental technology companies. He has been in the energy transaction business since 1977 and, since that time, has played an instrumental role in the development of more than $2 billion in energy assets and companies. Chris is a registered professional engineer and a lifetime Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Laura Taylor Singer

Gulf of Maine Research Institute

Laura Taylor Singer joined GMRI in 2001 to manage the collaborative fisheries research program. After three years growing GMRI’s portfolio of collaborative research projects, she is now serving as Chief Convening Officer for GMRI’s Community Programs. Laura brings a broad perspective of the nexus between scientists, fishermen and managers. Her past experience includes serving as Special Assistant to the Commissioner for the Maine Department of Marine Resources where her work focused on the evolving lobster zone management council process and co-management initiatives. She also worked with the Maine Legislature on several key marine policy initiatives including limited entry in the lobster industry and development of legislation to address emerging fisheries. In 1990, Laura was awarded the prestigious Thomas J. Watson Fellowship to study marine pollution in island nations, taking her to the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. She holds an undergraduate degree from Trinity College and a master’s degree in coastal environmental management from Duke University.