‘Stay out of our ocean!’ | ‘Big Wind’ comes face to face with its fiercest American critics – New Jerseyans

Officials from one of America’s biggest offshore wind projects underway by Shell and EDF endured an uncomfortable evening as they were lambasted by a raucous group of sector opponents. 

By Tim Ferry, RECHARGE

New Jerseyans are known for being forthright (some might even say “rude”), so in some ways it’s not surprising that representatives of the 1.5GW Atlantic Shores offshore wind development heard an earful at the project’s recent public scoping hearing in Atlantic City.

Held at the city’s headquarters, the hearing was ostensibly aimed at gaining comments on the Shell-EDF joint venture (JV)’s proposed landing site for the project on the beach at 35th Street and the onshore transmission cable route beneath city streets to the point of grid interconnection at the Cardiff substation in nearby Egg Harbour Township.

Offshore wind’s supporters came to the meeting ready to lay out the benefits of the industry to an area whose last great economic revival came from the casinos that line its seafront.

Related offshore wind energy news:
Opponents fill Atlantic City offshore wind hearing
Wind Execs Catch Hell At Atlantic City Public Hearing

What the wind power employees and other officials may not have been prepared for, however, was the sheer level of vitriol on display from the 100 or so attending, who had more on their minds than cables and whose views reflect the extreme end of a wave of opposition that’s making life uncomfortable for offshore wind projects from New Jersey to Eastern England.

“You are greedy, evil, lying people. We don’t want you here – get out! Stay out of our ocean!” Atlantic City resident Louise Rosanio shouted into the microphone just feet away from Atlantic Shores’ representatives to raucous cheers from the crowd, with the police and security staff looking on providing a clue that this would be no genteel affair.

Rosanio’s comments were typical and Atlantic Shores’ outside counsel Jim Boyd, meeting chair, repeatedly stopped proceedings to allow the stenographer to hear and transcribe each speaker.

“It’s unfortunate that these are the only opportunity people have to be heard,” New Jersey resident and prolific industry critic Mike Dean told Recharge on the sidelines.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=WDUXEG0vcvU

Dean claimed that the developer hasn’t publicised similar hearings in the past, and at other meetings, didn’t allow public comment.

“It’s one of the few opportunities people have to express their opposition,” he added.

The developer didn’t respond directly to any of the comments at the hearing but instead will release a document addressing each one.

“One of Atlantic Shores’ core values is ‘be a good neighbour’ and we think public hearings are just one of many ways for the community to have their voice heard on major infrastructure projects,” a representative for the developer told Recharge.

What became clear during the meeting was that any legitimate concerns expressed at the meeting were mixed in with half-truths and conspiracy theories of the kind familiar on certain regions of the internet.

Read the full story here


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Don’t take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

‘Stay out of our ocean!’ | ‘Big Wind’ comes face to face with its fiercest American critics – New Jerseyans Read More »

New Jersey gets juiced, officially

A worker helps corral the floating crimson cranberry haul in an area of Double Trouble State Park in Ocean County . Photo by Marc Steiner/Agency New Jersey

By Brent Johnson | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

You might want to pair your next pork roll — or Taylor ham — sandwich with a glass of cranberry juice. It’s now formally the state juice of New Jersey.

And make sure to thank the fourth-graders from Burlington County who helped make it happen.

The sweet red liquid, used as a cocktail mix in some cases and drank straight in others, has been designated the Garden State’s official juice of choice under a law state Senate President Nick Scutari signed Monday.

Scutari is serving as acting governor because Gov. Phil Murphy is on vacation in Italy and Lt. Gov. Sheila Oliver died last week.

The law acknowledges that New Jersey didn’t have a state juice, but this designation is “fitting and proper” because of the “significance of cranberries to the history and culture” of the state and its people.

This all started as a civics project from fourth-grade classes at Eleanor Rush Intermediate School in Cinnaminson in 2020. They proceeded to lobby for the law with letters to state legislators in Trenton.

It’s common for school children to learn about government and how bills become law by having them push for measures they think deserve to join the state’s law books.Get politics news like this right to your inbox with the N.J. Politics newsletter. Add your email below and hit “subscribe”

And cranberries are a very Jersey target. As the legislation (A2271) notes, they were harvested by the Lenni Lenape people in South Jersey, commercial cranberry farming began here in Burlington County in 1835, and Elizabeth Lee of New Jersey was one of the first to create jellied cranberry sauce, in 1917. She later joined other farmers in starting the company that became Ocean Spray.

New Jersey is now the third-largest producer of cranberries in America, behind Wisconsin and Massachusetts.

“Our history is rife with the love of cranberries,” one student told the state Senate earlier this year. “For this reason, we think that cranberry juice is the right juice to be the state juice.”

The state Legislature overwhelmingly approved the bill. It passed the Assembly 75-1 in February and the Senate 35-1 in May.


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Don’t take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

New Jersey gets juiced, officially Read More »

EPA Releases New Framework Addressing New Pfas and New Uses of Pfas in The Market

Graphic by Water Online

By Cliff L. Rothenstein, Dawn M. Lamparello, B. David Naidu, and Julia A. McGowan, K&L Gates

On Thursday, 29 June 2023, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a new framework (Framework) that will impact manufacturers across the country. The Framework lays out a new process for reviewing and assessing the potential environmental risks posed by new and new uses of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). 

This PFAS Framework establishes more stringent pre-market screening procedures for certain PFAS chemicals that may be harmful to human health or the environment. Under the Framework, the EPA will review and take appropriate action for new PFAS or significant new uses of existing PFAS through pre-manufacture notices (PMNs) and significant new use notices (SNNs) through the EPA’s authority under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). 

Background

PFAS are a class of fluorinated chemicals used in various consumer products and are commonly known as “forever chemicals” due to their high resistance to degradation. There are thousands of different PFAS, and only a small fraction of them have been well studied. In October 2021, the EPA announced a broad “PFAS Strategic Roadmap” aimed at researching and regulating the presence of PFAS in the environment. According to the EPA, this new PFAS Framework advances the EPA’s Roadmap through the “New Chemicals Program” mandated by TSCA Section 5.

The New Chemicals Program regulates “new chemicals” by requiring anyone who plans to manufacture them to provide the EPA with a PMN at least 90 days prior to manufacture, subject to certain exemptions. Under TSCA, a “new chemical” is any chemical that is not currently on the TSCA inventory, which is a list of chemicals that are already deemed “existing” in US commerce. Therefore, when new chemicals are created, the EPA reviews them under the New Chemicals Program to ensure their entrance into the market will not pose significant health concerns or dangerous environmental releases. Manufacturers are also subject to a 90-day notice requirement if they wish to engage in the use of a chemical that the EPA has deemed a “significant new use” from what had previously been approved by the agency under a prior PMN submission, by way of a SNUN submission.

Read the full story here


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Don’t take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

EPA Releases New Framework Addressing New Pfas and New Uses of Pfas in The Market Read More »

It’s lights-out time for your incandescent bulbs

PA retailers are prohibited from selling light bulbs that do not match the new national standard.

Retailers cannot sell light bulbs that don’t meet the new standards as of Tuesday, as the DOE said it will begin enforcing the rule with both businesses and manufacturers. People with incandescent bulbs at home may still use them.
Retailers cannot sell light bulbs that don’t meet the new standards as of Tuesday, as the DOE said it will begin enforcing the rule with both businesses and manufacturers. People with incandescent bulbs at home may still use them. (Shutterstock)


By Michelle Rotuno-Johnson, Patch Staff

PENNSYLVANIA — Shopping for light bulbs today? You won’t see certain kinds on Pennsylvania shelves any more, as a Department of Energy rule against incandescent bulbs takes effect on Aug. 1 in favor of more energy-efficient lighting.

Retailers cannot sell light bulbs that don’t meet the new standards as of Tuesday, as the DOE said it will begin enforcing the rule with both businesses and manufacturers.

Keystone State residents who purchased standard incandescent bulbs in the past may still use them to light up their homes, but officials put standards in place last April to begin phasing them out.

The maximum penalty for manufacturers who violate the ban is $542 for every light bulb made out of regulation, according to a report from Nexstar.

“DOE’s enforcement office is committed to enforcing DOE’s regulations in a fair and equitable manner,” a Department of Energy spokesperson told Patch.

The rule on “general service lamps,” one of two adopted by President Biden’s administration last April, says that light bulbs must emit a minimum of 45 lumens (a measure of brightness) per watt.

This is a more energy-efficient measure than incandescent bulbs provide: Most light-emitting diode (LED) bulbs provide about 75 lumens per watt, according to a CNN Business report. In contrast, traditional incandescent bulbs provide 15 lumens per watt, according to light bulb manufacturer Philips.

Department of Energy officials said this move will help consumers save on their energy bills, and also conserve energy while reducing carbon emissions. Residential LED lightbulbs use at least 75 percent less energy than conventional incandescent bulbs, and also last up to 25 percent longer, said the DOE.


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Don’t take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

It’s lights-out time for your incandescent bulbs Read More »

NY Activists Descend on the Hamptons to Protest the Super Rich Fueling the Climate Crisis

From the airport to a golf course, museum gala and private mansions, activists confronted the extreme wealth driving global warming, and the challenges facing grassroots organizations that stand up to billionaires.

Police officers saw the PVC pipe off Sophie Shepherd's arm that connected her with other demonstrators blocking access to the East Hampton Town Airport. Shepherd is an organizer with Planet Over Profit who said she was a "rule follower" before she started risking arrest in climate demonstrations. Credit: Keerti Gopal
Police officers saw the PVC pipe off Sophie Shepherd’s arm that connected her with other demonstrators blocking access to the East Hampton Town Airport. Shepherd is an organizer with Planet Over Profit who said she was a “rule follower” before she started risking arrest in climate demonstrations. Credit: Keerti Gopal

By Keerti Gopal, Inside Climate News

Sophie Shepherd has always described herself as a “rule follower,” but days before her 22nd birthday, she chose to face arrest in the middle of a Long Island driveway. Under a blazing hot July sun, two police officers sawed through the PVC pipes that connected her arms to the 13 other protesters blocking the entrance to a private airport.

“What I love about direct action is you’re actually getting in people’s faces and disrupting their way of life,” Shepherd said. “That push is what’s necessary to change the temperature in the room.”

Last month, Shepherd and around forty other climate activists from New York City and Long Island descended on the East Hampton Town Airport to heat up the conversation on how the super rich drive global warming.

As police separated and arrested the demonstrators blocking the driveway, other activists in the group surrounded them carrying plastic pitchforks and posters that read “tax the rich.” Their bright red t-shirts read, “billionaires, what are you saving up for, hell?” above a graphic of cash burning. A five-year-old holding a pitchfork and a homemade poster started a chant: “stop private jets, stop funding oil!” Behind them, in the distance, sat a few rows of private planes and helicopters.

Among those arrested for blocking the driveway to the East Hampton Town Airport was Abigail Disney, 63, great-niece of Walt Disney and an outspoken critic of the climate impacts of private aviation. Credit: Keerti Gopal
Among those arrested for blocking the driveway to the East Hampton Town Airport was Abigail Disney, 63, great-niece of Walt Disney and an outspoken critic of the climate impacts of private aviation. Credit: Keerti Gopal

The airport blockade was only the first of eight actions that weekend organized by New York Communities for Change (NYCC), Planet over Profit and Sunrise Movement NYC. In addition to shutting down the airport—for which Shepherd and 13 other protesters were arrested—the activists marched for a wealth tax with leaders from the Shinnecock Indigenous nation, crashed an exclusive golf course, stormed a museum gala, demonstrated outside the private homes of a Citibank chairman and a private equity billionaire and stirred up climate conversations at two high-end restaurants.

The racially and socioeconomically diverse coalition of activists sought to draw attention to the disproportionate role the ultra-wealthy play in filling the atmosphere with greenhouse gasses, advocate for a wealth tax to fund climate justice initiatives and pressure top fossil fuel beneficiaries to stop funding climate-warming activities. During their weekend together, the activists also grappled with what it takes to win lasting change in a stubborn world.

Read the full story here


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Don’t take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

NY Activists Descend on the Hamptons to Protest the Super Rich Fueling the Climate Crisis Read More »