Updated: Hearing scheduled this week on bill aimed at advancing offshore wind

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Wind turbines in Denmark. (Doug Rainey photo)
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A hearing is slated for Wednesday on a bill that would allow Delaware to acquire electricity from offshore wind farms.

The hearing by the Senate Environment, Energy & Transportation Committee is scheduled for 1 p.m.

The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Stephanie Hansen, D-Middletown, authorizes the State Energy Office, with the approval of the Public Service Commission to solicit bids for offshore wind. Delaware could do this alone or in partnership with other states.

Offshore wind is needed under the state’s mandate that mandates a large percentage of electricity coming from renewable sources.

The legislation takes a cautious approach that calls for soliciting bids if it is believed that the market conditions indicate costs would come in at 110% of the average electricity price paid by Delmarva Power over a three-year period.

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Offshore wind projects have faced challenges, including higher costs and a lack of infrastructure needed to fabricate and build towers housing wind turbines.

Ørsted withdrew from the State of Maryland’s system but is still developing Skipjack Wind. A spokesman said Ørsted intends to submit the project’s construction and operations Plan to the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Ørsted continues to monitor procurement opportunities in the region for wind-generated electricity.

That would seem to open the door for Delaware to buy offshore wind power.

Backers of offshore projects cite the economic boost provided by the projects and the need for more electricity as coal-fired power plants become uncompetitive with natural gas and solar power. Delaware’s only coal-fired power plant in Sussex County is now being subsidized by ratepayers as the grid is strengthened in the area

The legislation is expected to draw fire from offshore wind opponents who claim, without evidence, that the wind farms and electric lines going ashore are responsible for a recent spike in whales washing up on beaches. The visual impact of wind-generating towers has also been cited.

The legislation has no GOP co-sponsors. Some southern Delaware Republican legislators have joined the Glasgow-based Caesar Rodney Institute in opposing wind projects. An offshoot of the public policy group has been raising funds and has also been involved in legal challenges to offshore wind projects in other states. Campaigns by offshore wind opponents in New Jersey and elsewhere have eroded once solid public support for such projects.

Delaware has refrained from joining other Mid-Atlantic and Northeast states in developing offshore wind until recently.

The state is now weighing a proposal from the developers of US Wind’s Marwin project to bring electric lines ashore in Delaware. The Marwin project is off the coast of Ocean City and Fenwick Island.

Click here for a copy of the bill. Click here to offer comments and view the hearing.

(Correction: A previous version of this story reported the Skipjack project had been canceled).

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