Return to Virginia Business - January 2003

Wind farms off the Eastern Shore?

Smith Island off Virginia’s Eastern Shore is a hauntingly beautiful and remote spot marked by acres of green salt marshes and bright blue creeks. In a few years, however, some 221 electricity-generating windmills, each at least 358 feet tall, may twirl in the ocean about three miles off offshore.

At least that’s the dream of Winergy LLC of Shirley, N.Y. which plans to erect the windmills in a 45-square-mile site off of Northampton County. It plans similar projects in 21 other East Coast sites, modeled in part by dozens of such wind parks off the coast of Europe.

Getting permits for the projects from the Army Corps of Engineers, state and local authorities could take three years, says Bob Link, the company’s compliance officer. Constructing the windmills could take a year, with a total cost of about $900 million. “We have an opportunity to set up a renewable base that cuts down oil dependency,” says Link. “It’ll go to a utility or anybody who wants to buy it. Will it be clean? Yes.”

The Eastern Shore is an ideal spot because of its constant breezes and location away from major shipping lanes. Energy companies that need to offset the emissions from polluting power plants will need the wind-generated power, Link says.

Improved technology makes wind-generated power plants possible; there are already land-based wind farms in states including California, Wyoming and Vermont but nothing off shore. Dominion Virginia Power is considering building a 40-turbine wind farm near its Mount Storm coal-fired power plant in West Virginia, about 50 miles west of Front Royal. The U.S. Department of Energy wants wind power to provide 5 percent of the nation’s energy by 2020. Europe is far ahead of the U.S.; its market is growing at 40 percent a year. The first offshore windfarm was built off the coast of Denmark in 1992.

There is some opposition to wind-energy projects. A proposal by another company to erect windmills near Cape Cod drew opposition from locals who didn’t want the view obstructed and from environmentalists who said birds and marine life would be harmed. There’s also little policy controlling the placement or number of windmills. Sen. John Warner, R-Va., wrote a letter last summer to the Secretary of the Army questioning the project. Warner’s office didn’t respond when asked if he would oppose the Winergy plan.

Virginia Business - January 2003