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Related: About this forumOffshore wind farm proposed for Gulf of Mexico near Galveston could power 2.3 million homes
by Mitchell Ferman, Texas TribuneHOUSTON The Gulf of Mexicos first offshore wind farms will be developed off the coasts of Texas and Louisiana, the Biden administration announced Wednesday, and together theyre projected to produce enough energy to power around 3 million homes.
The wind farms likely will not be up and running for years, energy analysts and the states grid operator said, but the announcement from the U.S. Interior Department is the first step in ramping up offshore wind energy in the United States, which has lagged behind that of Europe and China. The only two operating offshore wind energy farms in the U.S. are off the coasts of Rhode Island and Virginia, which together produce 42 megawatts of electricity enough to power fewer than 2,500 homes.
One of the new wind projects announced Wednesday will be developed 24 nautical miles off the coast of Galveston, covering a total of 546,645 acres bigger than the city of Houston with the potential to power 2.3 million homes, according to the U.S. Interior Departments Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. The other project will be developed near Port Arthur, about 56 nautical miles off the coast of Lake Charles, Louisiana, covering 188,023 acres with the potential to power 799,000 homes.
Its exciting to see offshore wind in the Gulf getting closer to reality, said Luke Metzger, executive director of Environment Texas, an environmental protection group. With strong winds in the evenings when we need energy the most, offshore wind in the Gulf of Mexico would greatly complement Texas onshore renewable energy resources, help bolster our shaky electric grid and help our environment.
Read more: https://www.texastribune.org/2022/07/22/texas-gulf-of-mexico-wind-farm/
jimfields33
(18,838 posts)I can see it now. A hurricane runs them down.
Haggard Celine
(17,022 posts)Surely they have a plan for how to withstand hurricanes. Big storms are becoming more frequent. They need to have a hell of a plan worked out!
Paladin
(28,758 posts)Particularly a 4-or-5 category storm.
Said plan better not have any friends of Greg Abbott or Rick Perry or Ted Cruz or---you see where I'm going with this---involved in it.
Haggard Celine
(17,022 posts)but I'm thinking that maybe they could make the blades collapsible. Of course, if you do that, you want to be able to control it remotely. It wouldn't work to have them so that they need people to go out there and bring the blades down themselves, not when a hurricane is coming. It would need to be state-of-the-art. I'm suspicious about who does the job as well. It'll probably be somebody's brother-in-law who gets the job, and he'll probably fuck it up. Such is life on the Gulf Coast. If the company who gets the job is in any way tied to the oil industry, it will probably be sabotaged.