Clean Energy and Conservation Collide in California Coastal Waters

San Francisco Bay

A wind-energy dispute highlights the intense opposition large renewable power projects often face, even in states committed to the fight against climate change.

March 19, 2024
Nadia Lopez & Josh Saul - Bloomberg

Two of President Joe Biden’s biggest priorities — conservation and the switch to clean energy — are colliding in the ocean off California’s quiet Central Coast.

Located halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, Morro Bay boasts a rich ecosystem of fish, otters and migrating whales that the Indigenous Chumash people want to protect with a new marine sanctuary. But 20 miles (32 kilometers) out, developers plan some of the West Coast’s first offshore wind farms, where 1,100-foot-tall turbines (335 meters) tethered to the seabed will help California cut its carbon emissions.

One US government agency appears poised to approve the sanctuary. Another already leased 376 square miles of ocean for wind development, just outside the sanctuary’s boundaries. Now, a fight is brewing over whether the scenic bay itself should be left out of the sanctuary, to give undersea power cables from the wind farms a place to come onshore.

Reprinted courtesy of Nadia Lopez, Bloomberg and Josh Saul, Bloomberg



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