Responding to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s nearly 500-page draft environmental impact statement, NOAA fisheries said in a letter that many of the conclusions lack sufficient evidence and require further examination.
A federal agency responsible for the stewardship of marine resources has raised questions about the impacts of the nation’s first “utility-scale” wind farm planned for waters approximately 14 miles south of the Vineyard.
Responding to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s nearly 500-page draft environmental impact statement, the National Marine Fisheries Service, informally known as NOAA fisheries, said in a letter that many of the conclusions drawn in the report about the limited or modest effects of the project on marine habitat lack sufficient evidence and require further examination.
“We determined that many of the conclusory statements relating to the scale of impacts for biological and socioeconomic resources are not well supported in the document,” a letter from the fisheries service to BOEM states. “Specifically, impacts categorized as major appear under-inclusive, while impacts designated as moderate seem overly inclusive.”
Last Thursday, the Martha’s Vineyard Commission closed a public hearing on two, 220 kilo volt undersea cables that would run through Edgartown waters to connect the wind farm to mainland Massachusetts. Vineyard Wind, the energy partnership that won the rights in a federal auction to build the proposed 84-turbine farm, intends to bury the cables at a target depth of 6.6 feet below the ocean floor.
During the hearing, many members of the public who testified cited the BOEM draft environmental impact statement that, among other things, assesses the effects of the project on marine life as minor. But in the letter to BOEM, the fisheries service questioned those conclusions and requested a more detailed analysis of the project.
“The conclusion that impacts to benthic resources would be negligible from the project is not supported by the information provided in this section,” the letter reads in part. The letter goes on to request that the indirect impacts from the cable installation, such as the effects of sedimentation and noise on eelgrass and shellfish beds, receive further attention from BOEM. “There is no discussion in this section on impacts of the project to epifauna which is an important benthic resource found on hard/bottom/complex habitats,” the report continues.
The letter also claimed that the wind development area and cable route, which runs approximately one mile east of Chappaquiddick through Muskeget Channel, is one of the primary documented spawning locations for longfin squid, and that the effects of the cable’s electromagnetic field (EMF) on that species remains unclear.
“The [impact statement] should evaluate existing literature and recognize information that remains unknown around EMF. Without adequate study on the effects of EMF and heat from transmission cables on invertebrates, the conclusion that impacts would be negligible for demersal species and life stages is not supported.”
NOAA fisheries, whose Greater Atlantic Fisheries office is located in Gloucester, is an active federal regulator responsible for the monitoring and preservation of the nation’s marine habitat up to 200 miles from shore.
“We conducted this review from a unique perspective,” the letter reads. “Not only are we a cooperating agency with expert understanding and jurisdiction over marine trust resources, but we are also a consulting agency under the...Endangered Species Act.”

Comments
It can’t be good for marine
Richard Vineyard HavenIt can’t be good for marine habitat. It can’t be good to look at. It poses a danger...but is probably better than continuing reliance on fossil fuels. It may be neat and clean, or it may be a mess. Is it worth the risk here?
No
Robert Lake WorthNo
Unfortunately, wind will not
Wind Watcher Martha's VineyardUnfortunately, wind will not replace the use of fossil fuels. There are several reasons for this - 1) fossil fuel plants must be kept on spinning reserve in case wind dies down 2)electricity must match demand, so if there is not enough demand while the wind is blowing (at night, for example) the energy cannot be utilized 3)coal is base load power, and is meant to burn steadily, it cannot be ramped up and down depending on the wind. The claims of how many homes will be powered by installations such as this are always grossly misrepresented, and they count on people to not understand how wind power or the grid works.
It's a "feel good" project
bs Oak BluffsIt's a "feel good" project that will result in higher electric prices hurting the working class but providing the elites fodder for their dinner parties next summer.
Indeed. A rep from Eversource
Citizen Vineyard HavenIndeed. A rep from Eversource at a community Climate cafe (whatever it was called) talked incentives for choosing wind energy: basically, your normal energy plan is about to get jacked up in $$ to subsidize (or penalize you for not choosing) the unsustainable wind-powered program. I would like to hear verification on this from Eversource, would Gazette follow up? Thanks.
Unknown effects on marine
Gregg Rosner Cedar Island DelawareUnknown effects on marine life, with a project of this scope is clearly a given. Liability for disruption of ecosystem stasis should be a legal and financial responsibility of wind farm companies.
It is so gratifying to see
Peter Meade, PhD FloridaIt is so gratifying to see forethought in environmental concerns... We have had too many "plastic or paper"... ground temp increase and bird kills with wind farms, and resource depletion with solar to electric conversions..
Thanks for thinking about the future and helping understand the choices
This comes from NMFS, the
Albie Scott Newburyport, MassachusettsThis comes from NMFS, the regulatory agency ( "expert understanding and jurisdiction over marine trust resources ") that allowed herring pair trawlwers, ignoring the opposition of inshore fisherman, to fish inshore so that industrial fishing companies could turn that vitally important forage stock into fish meal for export at 10 cents a pound ? Within 3 years, barely any herring could be found inside.
NMFS has a history of making descisions that have had serious negative impacts on our fisheries. Fisherman have learned to take anything that they say with a large grain of salt. When NMFS says that they know what they're talking about, fisherman collectively groan.
We need more info and testing
whalelover55We need more info and testing on how this huge projection will effect marine life. It's going to be A LOT of construction. Will the sounds/dust kicked up bother the marine life? I'd say most likely, yes.
"NOAA fisheries, said in a
SaveOurFish Chappy"NOAA fisheries, said in a letter that many of the conclusions drawn in the report about the limited or modest effects of the project on marine habitat lack sufficient evidence and require further examination." As I've said all along, there is no substantive evidence pointing to what impact this project will actually have on our environment and our wildlife - both of which are valuable Vineyard assets. MVC should shut this down until we have scientifically supported answers to these questions. We can always restart this project, but once it's commenced there is no turning back - we can't bring back the eelgrass, shellfish and longfin squid. It's only fair to the residents of the Vineyard that every bit of the impacts of this project are thoroughly vetted by MVC. It is clear that the environmental impact & wildlife impact of this project isn't fully understood, and MVC should not allow this project to proceed until those impacts are clearly understood, communicated and backed by scientific evidence.
In the years since various
Paul Hannigan EdgartownIn the years since various cables were run from the mainland to MV and Nantucket, have there been any documented adverse impacts of any significant consequence to the environment/ecosystems?
And this type of thinking
SaveOurFish ChappyAnd this type of thinking hasn't led us down a precipitous path before? i.e. decades of thinking 'My car doesn't appear to be doing anything bad to the environment, so let me keep driving it' hasn't now led to humans having massively polluted our atmosphere with CO2?
Good questions deserve good answers. The Vineyard public deserves scientifically backed answers about what the environmental and wildlife impact of this project will be. We don't deserve to 'wait and see'... that's never turned out well in the past, and it won't turn out well if that's the route MVC chooses to go with this project. The answers that have been provided through the EIS are lackluster in the eyes of NOAA. That is a serious warning call coming from a federal scientific agency, and should provide more than enough reason for us (and MVC) to perk up our ears and dig deeper until we get some accountable, scientifically backed answers as to the environmental impact of this project.
The cables from the mainland
Right Whale Hooter BuoyThe cables from the mainland are 15,000 volts. The proposed cables from the wind farm are 220,000 volts. There is a difference.
Not enough talk about the
Concerned West TisburyNot enough talk about the infrasonic impact associated with wind farms which would multiply exponentially through water distribution. It raises cortisol (stress) levels to extremes in mammals — this would effect not only human mental and physical health, but animals on the mainland (say goodbye to the quality of life for even free range animals, and there are documented case where chickens no longer lay eggs in wind farm areas) — and there is little research re: marine wind farms. This is such a ridiculously irresponsible undertaking. If you don’t care about biology, here’s the economics: one wind turbine will produce less energy in its 10-20 year lifetime than will be expended in its installation alone. All of this information is easily verifiable, google “wind farm risks”. Waste of time, energy, money, and HEALTH.
EMF has been addressed on
Kyle Kingman NJEMF has been addressed on many offshore wind projects for decades now overseas. It is a non-issue and only brought up to raise fear by asking "what if" to turn people away from something good. I get it that some people do not want to see them offshore of their beach house. Personally I may even agree there if the net positives weren't so good. Fact is, submarine power cables such as these are sheathed/shielded which entirely blocks the electric field, leaving only the magnetic field (unlike overhead HVAC lines). The three conductors are phase shifted to cancel out most all of the magnetic field. There have been studies on this and no significant effects have been observed attributed to EMF (Dong, 2006). HVDC cables have no electric field and only a small static magnetic field which is heading dependent. Either HVDC or HVAC cables have a target burial depth of 2m to protect from bottom trawling and light to moderate anchoring. The little remaining magnetic field strength decays inverse cubed with distance. Submarine power cables cross countless tidal estuaries, rivers, fjords, bays, and seas around the world where marine life of all kinds continue to migrate, breed, and thrive. The EMF issue is simply not an issue. It is just uneducated fear mongering.
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