The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management- BOEM in the US went on to announce recently that it is going to be conducting a regional environmental review of potential development activities when it comes to five offshore wind lease areas off California’s central as well as north coasts.
The Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement- PEIS can go on to have the effect of speeding the planning as well as the approval process for West Coast wind power development.
BOEM’s Pacific regional director, Doug Boren, says that this regional environmental evaluation will help in ensuring timely decisions can be made to make way for offshore wind while protecting the ocean environment, marine life, as well as other ocean uses. This approach also makes sure of both a total review of the California areas as well as improved efficiencies for the review of future offshore wind projects.
The PEIS will chalk out the potential impacts of federal waters offshore wind energy development and how mitigation measures can go on to change those future effects as per the agency.
BOEM says that it is going to conduct subsequent site-specific National Environmental Policy Act- NEPA evaluations as well as consultations for individual proposed wind energy projects as construction as well as operations plans for those projects are received.
It is well to be noted that the five offshore wind energy lease areas off the coast of California were awarded post-the December 2022 auction by BOEM, which went on to add a revenue of $757 million from wind companies.
Wind power advocates, when it comes to industry, non-profit Oceantic Network, opined that the Pacific Coast regional environmental review would be the same as one that was done in New York and New Jersey back in last year. The PEIS will describe the probable effects of offshore wind development off California’s coast and also the potential mitigation measures along with their impacts.”
Founder and CEO of Oceantic said that by doing an initial analysis on the newly leased West Coast areas, BOEM will go on to streamline offshore wind development across California and also build in environmental protections on the front end. This proactive action is actually the type of leadership one needs from both state as well as federal governments.