Tag Archives: Dead whales

“Thrown To The Wind” documentary exposes government destruction of marine habitat

“Damn the whales, full speed ahead” seems to be the offshore wind policy of Biden’s NOAA. In the offshore wind stampede Biden’s National Marine Fisheries Service has lost sight of its mission to protect marine mammals.

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

More on Michael Shellenberger’s campaign against the offshore wind farm projects that are killing whales.

Gradually his efforts are gaining traction – this clip comes from San Diego apparently. And he believes that Congress may soon start to investigate what appears to be blat6ant disregard for the law by the Federal Government:

CFACT helps lead Cape May protest to Save the Whales

CFACT helps organize Cape May rally to Save the Whales from offshore wind.

From  CFACT

Over 120 people gathered to protest offshore wind energy in Cape May, New Jersey and call attention to mounting numbers of whales being washed up along the East Coast this year. Numerous speakers addressed the crowd and led them in chants, including CFACT’s president Craig Rucker, and the event concluded with protestors holding glow sticks and forming a “whale tail” to showcase their solidarity with other activists around the world that were also conducting protests.

“We know that the pile driving and sonar blasting going on out there is being done at decibel levels that interfere with the whale, dolphin and other marine mammal navigation system…that’s outlandish,” Rucker noted. CFACT’s president then went on to say that the offshore wind projects should be opposed because they are not truly “green”, they drive up costs on ratepayers, and they destabilize the grid.

Also addressing the crowd was Congressman Jeff Van Drew, state Senator Michael Testa, Lund Fisheries president Wayne Reichle, Bonnie Brady of the Long Island Commercial Fisherman Association, conservation biologist Trisha DeVoe, animal rights activist Constance Gee, NJ fisherman Ed Baxter, and radio 98.7 FM host Melanie Collette.

The Biden administration currently plans to put in 30,000 MW of offshore wind by 2030 but has suffered numerous setbacks in recent months that has put his goal in jeopardy. Southcoast Wind in Massachusetts recently doled out $60 million to pull out of its contract to provide 2,400 MW in that state, and Avangrid’s Park City wind project was also recently terminated. In all, nearly 10,000 MW or the 30,000 MW of the President’s planned goal is now in a state of collapse as stock prices for several offshore wind and utility companies have plummeted by 40% in recent months.


The Wind Industry Is Killing Whales–Michael Shellenberger

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

h/t Tim Hossack

Where are Greenpeace?

Have a look at this short video:

Fishermen Fight to End to Offshore Wind Industry’s Wholesale Whale Slaughter

NEW YORK, US – FEBRUARY 17: A dead whale is found on Rockaway Beach in the Queens Borough in New York City, United States on February 17, 2023. The tenth one to wash ashore in the New York-New Jersey area since early December in what activists are calling an alarming uptick. (Photo by Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

From STOP THESE THINGS

The wind industry’s mindless slaughter of whales, dolphins, porpoises and seals is completely legit, thanks to government-backed licenses known as the ‘Incidental Harassment Authorization’.

The principal cause of the carnage is the seismic geo-surveys conducted before the turbines get speared into the seabed. With their sonar systems duly scrambled by the underwater cacophony, the whales meander dazed, confused and unable to avoid ships on the move. The collisions with shipping are, more often than not, fatal and the whale’s floating carcass simply washes up onshore, as another wind industry statistic. The Federal government marks the fatality down as ‘incidental harassment’, and its agencies work overtime to exonerate the wind industry with the usual grab bag of lies and obfuscation.

None of which amuses America’s flinty oceangoing fishermen. These characters know the North Atlantic like the backs of their hands; they also know a government-backed lie when they hear one. As Francis Martel details below.

The principal cause of the carnage is the seismic geo-surveys conducted before the turbines get speared into the seabed. With their sonar systems duly scrambled by the underwater cacophony, the whales meander dazed, confused and unable to avoid ships on the move. The collisions with shipping are, more often than not, fatal and the whale’s floating carcass simply washes up onshore, as another wind industry statistic. The Federal government marks the fatality down as ‘incidental harassment’, and its agencies work overtime to exonerate the wind industry with the usual grab bag of lies and obfuscation.

None of which amuses America’s flinty oceangoing fishermen. These characters know the North Atlantic like the backs of their hands; they also know a government-backed lie when they hear one. As Francis Martel details below.

NJ Fishing Pros Warn Offshore Wind Killing Ocean Life: ‘Never Seen Anything Like This in Half a Century’
Breitbart
Francis Martel
3 August 2023

POINT PLEASANT NEW JERSEY – FEBRUARY 19: Environmentalists gather during a ‘Save the Whales’ rally calling for a halt to offshore wind energy development along the Jersey Shore on February 19, 2023 in Point Pleasant New Jersey. The rally, hosted by the environmental organization Clean Ocean Action, followed the deaths of numerous whales, Since Dec. 1, 2022 according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA 12 whales have died in NY and NJ (Photo by Kena Betancur/VIEWpress)

New Jersey’s veteran fishing community fears surveying to install offshore wind turbines near the state’s shore is already causing tremendous environmental damage, one local boat captain told Breitbart News, asserting that, in his experience, “dead whales on our beach absolutely and logically have everything to do with the oceanic geo-surveys.”

New Jersey is in the process of approving two major offshore wind projects: the Ocean Wind I and II initiatives owned by the Danish “green” energy company Ørsted. Radical leftist Governor Phil Murphy ordered a massive restructuring of the state’s power grid in September to become reliant on “100 percent clean energy by 2035” that has enjoyed enthusiastic support from the White House, which approved Ocean Wind I in July.

To install the wind turbines necessary for the projects, engineers must survey and map the ground floor to find the ground best able to sustain the massive structures. The survey work being done in anticipation of the installation of these turbines has coincided with a massive increase in the number of dead whales and other marine mammals off the coasts of New York and New Jersey.

As of June, scientists have documented at least 14 humpback and minke whales washing ashore dead in the two states compared to nine in all of 2022. Between December and May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) documented 25 dead whales washing ashore along the entirety of the East Coast, nine in New Jersey. The whales washing ashore are dramatic affairs, as they have on several occasions appeared on boardwalk beaches frequented by families, alarming locals.

Most whales who have undergone autopsies after washing ashore showed signs of blunt trauma, suggesting they died by hitting ships.

Veteran fishermen in New Jersey, who have spent decades studying the sea, say the whale deaths and those of other marine mammals are unprecedented and insist a relationship must exist between the surveying and the deaths. As marine mammals use sonar, the theory suggests that the surveying is disrupting the animals’ ability to know where ships are and thus avoid hitting them. NOAA insists that it has no scientific evidence linking the surveying – which, like whales, dolphins, and porpoises, uses sonar for echolocation – to the whale deaths.

“At this point, there is no evidence that noise resulting from wind development-related site characterization surveys could potentially cause mortality of whales, and no specific links between recent large whale mortalities and currently ongoing surveys,” NOAA’s website reads.

Robert Bogan, the captain of the Gambler recreational fishing vessel in Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey, said in a letter to his Congressman, Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ), shared with Breitbart News this week that the whale deaths present an entirely new phenomenon to him – something unless in the over half a century Capt. Bogan has spent regularly taking his customers out to fish.

The Gambler is what is commonly known in the Jersey Shore region as a party boat – it offers tickets for individual trips to sea for fishermen and provides the service of finding the fish, aiding new fishermen with basic training, providing bait, and fileting the catches. It has been in operation since 1949 as a local family business. It offers trips closer to shore – for species such as summer flounder (fluke) in the summer – and trips further out for tuna and other large catches in the colder months, meaning its crew are familiar with the conditions of the sea year-round.

“My business runs 10 months out of the year and we employ up to 10 people. Many other businesses in our shore community depend on our business –as we do those businesses,” Bogan explained. “I find it very disturbing that the powers backing the offshore windmill development would claim that there is no correlation between wind research development and the dead whales that continue to wash up on our beaches.”

“In my 50+ years of working on the ocean, I have never seen anything remotely like this,” he emphasized. “Dead whales on our beach absolutely and logically have everything to do with the oceanic geo-surveys.”

“NOAA was so concerned about slowing our boats down to less than 10 knots (basically a crawl), so as not to strike a whale and yet they signed-off on these invasive surveys, and admitted there would be an ‘acceptable’ whale mortality involved,” Bogan wrote. “Now, they don’t want to admit there was any mortality coinciding with wind research.”

Contrary to assurances on NOAA’s website, a Bloomberg News report in November unearthed a report from NOAA protected species expert Sean Hayes who warned the wind projects “will likely cause added stress that could result in additional population consequences to a species that is already experiencing rapid decline,” referring to whales.

“If these whales are dying from boat strikes, then how do we explain the deaths of many porpoises that have playfully swam the bow-wakes of ships for centuries?” he asked. “In all my years working the ocean: winter, spring, summer and fall — we have never hit, have seen or know of any boater who has hit a whale.”

Bogan described himself as initially “open-minded” about offshore wind, but feels “lied to” about the environmental damage.

We only know of the whales that were hurt by seismic and sonar research because they float when dead. What of all the other affected sea life that did not come to the surface?” he asked.

Asked about the letter, Rep. Smith told Breitbart News that Bogan’s experiences and concerns were representative of a growing chorus of voices of maritime professionals at the Shore.

“Captain Robert Bogan and numerous recreational and commercial fisherman — who know our sea better than anyone else — have reached out to me with serious, first-hand observations regarding the aggressive offshore wind industrialization of our Jersey Shore,” Rep. Smith said.  “Tragically, their alarming insights about these unprecedented offshore wind projects and the resulting permanent transformation of our marine seascape continue to be ignored by Governor Phil Murphy and the Biden Administration.”

“The hardworking members of our community who depend on the sea for their livelihoods, and who contribute enormously to our economy, deserve to have their concerns thoroughly addressed—not trivialized, mocked or dismissed,” the Congressman added.

Bogan’s observations in recreational fishing are consistent with those of New Jersey’s commercial anglers.

“The commercial fishing is extremely upset with the visual observations of dead whales floating at sea,” Brick Wenzel, Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey’s, fishing liaison and a longtime commercial fisherman, told Breitbart News in March. “One vessel said they had seen 3 different whales in one trip. Another had parts of a whale come up in their net. Most of the captains are generational fishers and are in their 60s — No one has heard of or [has] seen anything like the carnage being witnessed.”

Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ), whose district borders Rep. Smith’s to the south, similarly told Breitbart News in March that fishermen in his district have been alarmed by the situation for some time out of both fear for the environmental damage and concerns that the wind turbines will harm their fishing grounds.

“The fishermen have always been concerned, but it wasn’t just enough when it was just the fishermen,” Rep. Van Drew (R-NJ) asserted. “And now what’s happened is, over time, because of the whales, because of people realizing what these things are going to look like — we’re going to industrialize the Jersey Shore.”

Reps. Van Drew and Smith led a hearing in Wildwood, New Jersey, (Van Drew’s district) in March in which experts testified that, in addition to concerns about the potential mass killing of marine life, the offshore wind turbine projects appeared to interfere with military missions.

“NASA has said that these areas interfere with all their missions out of Wallops Island; the Navy has said there is not an area in that whole lease block that does not interfere with DOD [Department of Defense] missions, but BOEM [the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management] is continuing ahead,” Meghan Lapp, the fisheries liaison for the Rhode Island commercial fishing company Seafreeze, said at the event. “When I’ve asked them on webinars, like – the Navy said that this is a problem how can you still be leasing it? ‘Well, we’re just going to be continuing the discussions.’”

Other concerns regarding the offshore wind facilities are the unclear science regarding disposal of used wind turbines, potential threats to migrating birds, and few answers regarding whether or not the turbines could survive major hurricane damage, which New Jersey occasionally experiences.

In response to the lack of clarity regarding the Ocean Wind projects, Rep. Smith spearheaded an effort to begin an investigation into the plan by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), which confirmed a probe in June. The GAO will reportedly investigate potential effects on “the environment, the fishing industry, military operations, navigational safety, and more.”
Breitbart

The Wind Industry’s Ignored Consequences: Whales in Peril

From Watts Up With That?


Michael Shellenberger
 has an article in the New York Post titled:

New documentary ‘proves’ building offshore wind farms does kill whales

He describes how the documentary titled: “Thrown To The Wind” sheds light on a disturbing correlation between the wind industry and the alarming increase in cetacean deaths.

The Government’s Stance vs. The Documentary’s Findings

“The increase in whale, dolphin, and other cetacean deaths off the East Coast of the United States since 2016 is not due to the construction of large industrial wind turbines, U.S. government officials say. Their scientists have done the research, they say, to prove that whatever is killing the whales is completely unrelated to the wind industry.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

Yet, the documentary, produced by Jonah Markowitz, suggests otherwise.

“The film documents surprisingly loud, high-decibel sonar emitted by wind industry vessels when measured with state-of-the-art hydrophones. And it shows that the wind industry’s increased boat traffic is correlated directly with specific whale deaths.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

The North Atlantic Right Whale: A Species in Decline

The North Atlantic right whale, a species already on the brink, has seen its population drop from over 400 to a mere 340 in recent years.

“And, there have been more than 60 recorded whale deaths of all species on the East Coast since Dec 1, 2022, a number that increased markedly since 2016 when the wind industry started to ramp up.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

Ignoring the Warnings

Despite urgent warnings from leading conservation groups and top scientists at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), wind projects continue to move forward.

“The waters off New York and New Jersey have seen a sudden upsurge in whale deaths this year.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

The Mechanisms of Death

The documentary highlights two primary mechanisms by which wind industry activities are harming whales.

“The first is through boat traffic in areas where there hasn’t historically been traffic. The second is through high-decibel sonar mapping that can disorient whales, separate mothers from their calves, and send them into harm’s way, either into boat traffic or poorer feeding grounds.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

The Role of Money and Influence

It’s hard to ignore the influence of money in this scenario.

“Wind energy companies and their foundations have donated nearly $4.7 million to at least three dozen major environmental organizations.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

Furthermore, attempts to shed light on the issue have faced challenges.

“Facebook went so far as to censor my post linking whale deaths to wind energy off the East Coast of the United States.”

https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

A Call to Action

Given the evidence presented in “Thrown To The Wind,” it’s evident that the public cannot trust certain government agencies. Schellenberger writes:

it’s clear that the American people and our representatives cannot trust NOAA and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), the two government agencies that, for years, have repeatedly betrayed the public’s trust in service to powerful industrial interests.https://nypost.com/2023/08/26/new-documentary-proves-that-offshore-windfarms-kill-whales/

Conclusion

The wind industry’s impact on marine life, particularly the North Atlantic right whale, cannot be ignored. It’s time for a serious discussion of the true cost of so-called “sustainable” energy.

Read the full article at the New York Post.

Sod The Whales

From Climate Scepticism

By MARK HODGSON

And the dolphins and porpoises

The 1970s represent a formative decade for me, growing from childhood through my teens. I have so many memories, some good, some much less so, as I started to take an increasing interest in the world around me. Miners’ strikes, the referendum on continuing EEC membership, the glorious summer of 1976, the Vietnam war, the Winter of Discontent, punk rock and much more. One of my most vivid memories, however, is of the brave campaign fought by Greenpeace to save the whale, to bring an end to commercial whale hunting. Time and again the Davids of Greenpeace pitted themselves against the Goliaths of commercial whalers. Greenpeace has just cause to be proud of its work in helping to bring about a ban on commercial whaling, and its website tells the story here.

Fast-forward half a century, however, and we find a rather different story. So far as Greenpeace is concerned, whales are under threat from three main challenges – plastic in the oceans, deep sea mining, and climate change. In addition, Greenpeace says that “[p]ollution, noise, fishing, shipping and habitat loss also put them under pressure.” All of which is probably true (though given that whales have the entire oceans to roam, representing two thirds of the globe’s surface, I reserve judgement on the threat from climate change).

In the last few years I have noticed what certainly looks like a significant upward trend in an old phenomenon – whale strandings. The other thing I have noticed is that these often seem to occur in locations where offshore wind farms have been constructed or where survey work is taking place to ascertain whether the locations are suitable for wind farms. Of course, correlation is not causation (not necessarily, anyway) but the remarkable coincidence between increased whale strandings and wind farm developments is such that one might have thought that environmentalists generally, and Greenpeace specifically (in view of its proud track record in helping to protect whales) would be looking at this development with a jaundiced view and questioning whether or not there might be a connection.

One might have thought that, but one would be wrong. Instead, the reverse is the case. Not only is Greenpeace not wondering whether there might be a worrying nexus, rather they are going out of their way to give wind farm developers a free pass, and to insist that there is absolutely no connection whatsoever. Worse still (if it’s possible for anything to be worse), they also seek to label those who raise the possibiity of a connection as the purveyors of lies and disinformation.

The wheel has turned 180 degrees. Back in the 1970s commercial whalers were killing whales. That fact was undeniable, and so the brave warriors of Greenpeace put themselves between the whales and those who would kill them. Half a century later, whales are once again dying in alarmingly large numbers. The cause is uncertain. Rather than contemplate all possible causes, Greenpeace instead throws itself behind its new certainty – the religion of climate change, which trumps all else, including whales apparently. Wind farms (according to what passes for the logic) are vital to prevent climate change. Thus wind farms are good, and those who oppose them are bad. Also, if wind farms are good, they cannot possibly do harm, therefore they must be defended, whatever the cost.

In the last six months or so, Greenpeace has posted a couple of pieces on its website that deal with this issue. On 15th February 2023 it produced this under the heading “New report: Whales in danger as clock ticks towards deep sea mining”. Fair enough, so far as it goes, but its sub-heading reveals where Greenpeace is on the issue: “In the wake of baseless claims that offshore wind is a threat to whales, a new peer-reviewed report published today by the University of Exeter and Greenpeace Research Laboratories finds that the deep sea mining industry presents a very real threat to whale populations worldwide.” A couple of critical paragraphs say this:

The study, which focuses on the overlap between cetaceans (such as whales, dolphins, and porpoises) and target sites for deep sea mining, especially in the Pacific Ocean, says deep sea mining could cause “significant risk to ocean ecosystems” with “long-lasting and irreversible” impacts, including risks to globally endangered species like blue whales. It further states that research is needed to assess threats to these mammals, particularly noise pollution from proposed mining operations.

Arlo Hemphill, Greenpeace USA’s Project Lead on Deep Sea Mining, said: “There has been a lot of talk about wind turbines and whale deaths, but there is no evidence whatsoever connecting the two. Meanwhile, the oceans face more threats now than at any time in history. This report makes it clear that if the deep sea mining industry follows through on its plans, the habitats whales rely on will be in even greater danger. Instead of opening up a new industrial frontier in the largest ecosystem on earth, we should be establishing ocean sanctuaries to protect biodiversity.”

I share Arlo Hemphill’s concerns about the danger posed to maritime biodiversity by deep sea mining. However, unlike Mr Hemphill, I note that much of the pressure for such deep sea mining is the commercial desire to extract rare minerals that are needed for renewable energy projects such as the offshore wind farms that he is so keen to defend. The BBC acknowledged as much more than six years ago, Earlier this year, The Conversation, that hotbed of climate change alarmism, published an article with the heading “Deep seabed mining plans pit renewable energy demand against ocean life in a largely unexplored frontier”. It isn’t as though the nexus between deep sea mining and wind farms isn’t known about.

In any event, that single piece about deep sea mining, which included a side-swipe at those claiming cetaceans are facing problems caused by offshore wind farms, obviously didn’t deal with that issue sufficiently robustly. Just eight days later another piece appeared on the Greenpeace website, with the heading “How to Stop Whale Deaths from Real Threats, Not Lies About Wind Energy”. It doesn’t pull any punches:

Protecting whales means busting fossil-fueled myths about wind energy — Right-wing disinformation is the real threat!…

…Recently a new insidious threat to whales — and all biodiversity — has our attention: Disinformation.

In response to a tragic spate of whale deaths along the East Coast [of the USA], anti-science media such as FOX News, long beholden to fossil fuel corporations, has amplified the baseless claims made — with no supporting evidence — by a small group of local mayors that offshore wind farming is somehow to blame.

As noted by the marine mammal experts with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), there is zero evidence of a connection between the whale deaths and wind farming. Nevertheless, fear-mongering calls for a moratorium on wind power projects in the region benefit Big Oil’s fight against a just transition to renewable energy, while only pretending to care about local whale populations.

The perils of spreading misleading, false information may seem less immediate than a whaler’s harpoon. But climate disinformation moves us further away from the real solutions to the climate crisis that all living creatures so desperately need.

To debunk the dangerous disinformation distracting from the true dangers facing whale populations in this region of the Atlantic Ocean, we’ve consulted two-longtime oceans experts: Greenpeace USA’s Oceans Campaigns Director John Hocevar and Greenpeace USA’s Senior Oceans Campaigner Arlo Hemphill.

Let’s set the record straight…

It reads like a Guardian hit-piece, with all the usual lazy smears and tropes – right wing: tick. Fossil fuel corporations: tick. Fox News: tick. Big Oil: tick. Climate crisis: tick.

Speaking of the Guardian, it followed up last month with the defence of offshore wind farms and the smearing of those who suggest there is a connection between wind farm developments and whale deaths, with an article with the following heading and sub-heading: “Energy industry uses whale activists to aid anti-wind farm strategy, experts say – Unwitting whale advocates and rightwing thinktanks create the impression that offshore wind energy projects endanger cetaceans”. It’s all there too. It talks of:

…a trap laid out by rightwing interests that are sowing doubt to fuel public discontent over renewable energy projects.

Also in attendance that night was Lisa Linowes, a member of the SRWC who has also served as a senior research fellow for the notorious Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF), a rightwing thinktank known for its crusade against the energy transition.

This roster of attendees shows how industry interests opposed to climate action are capitalizing on locals’ concerns over the right whale in an attempt to block renewable energy projects. The rhetoric used by anti-wind crusaders like Chalke, Knight and Linowes posits nature against industry – but their reasoning is often flawed.

The SRWC’s strategy – exploiting gaps in scientific research or consensus to spread doubt – mirrors one long used by oil interests to delay the transition to renewable energy. Science historians Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway outlined how climate deniers and skeptics used this playbook in their 2010 book Merchants of Doubt.

Today, organizations like the SRWC are calling into question the effectiveness of wind energy in an attempt to delay or suspend construction of wind projects. Knight, whose group Green Oceans is also a member of the SRWC, recently self-published a white paper on wind energy that Roberts called “full of cherrypicked data”.

I’m not so sure about the data being cherry-picked. I would suggest it’s right there in front of us. It’s not as though the Guardian hasn’t been reporting on the unusual number of recent whale strandings, after all. A quick internet search using the terms “Guardian whale beachings” brings up the following headlines (with dates, simply in the order in which my search engine turned them up):

Race to save almost 50 pilot whales after same number die in mass stranding on WA beach”: 26th July 2023.

Linked article: ‘We have never seen this’: scientists baffled by behaviour of pilot whales before WA mass stranding – Environment minister says way pod crowded tightly together 150 metres offshore before becoming beached is ‘unique and pretty incredible’”: 26th July 2023.

Agony on a Cornish beach: what do whale strandings tell us about our oceans? The number of whales, porpoises and dolphins being washed up on the UK’s shores is on the rise, and human activity is largely to blame, say experts”: 25th February 2023.

Left stranded: US military sonar linked to whale beachings in Pacific, say scientists – Islands surrounded by US military study area, including Guam and Saipan, call for activity that harms the whales to stop”: 15th January 2021.

Stranding of three whales in Corfu raises alarm over seismic testing for fossil fuels”: 9th March 2022.

Beached whale increase may be due to military sonar exercises, say experts – It is thought sonar may scare animals into surfacing too quickly, causing decompression sickness”: 24th August 2020.

More than 50 pilot whales dead in mass stranding on Isle of Lewis in Scotland”: 16th July 2023.

That represents a very short, but possibly representative, list. The cases of such strandings are legion, and they do seem to be increasingly and distressingly commonplace. I find it very interesting indeed that experts can seek to put forward all sorts of possible explanations for the strandings, including that whales may be adversely affected by military sonar or (perhaps inevitably) by “seismic testing for fossil fuels”. I certainly don’t rule the latter out, but I do wonder why the same experts apparently rule out similar noise disturbance from existing wind farms and from the research work carried out onsite in connection with possible new ones.

Both Greenpeace and the Guardian cite NOAA in defence of their claim that experts reckon wind farms and whale strandings aren’t connected. The Guardian link takes us to this. It’s from 18th January 2023, and I wonder whether the apparent increase in whale strandings in the intervening seven months might make the experts at NOAA change their minds? I also note that they don’t categorically say that wind farms can’t affect and disorientate whales. The language is carefully chosen. They say things like this:

Since January 2016, NOAA Fisheries has been monitoring an Unusual Mortality Event for humpback whales with elevated strandings along the entire East Coast. There are currently 178 humpback whales included in the unusual mortality event. Partial or full necropsy examinations were conducted on approximately half of the whales. Of the whales examined, about 40% had evidence of human interaction, either ship strike or entanglement. And to date, no whale mortality has been attributed to offshore wind activities.

Call me a cynic if you like, but I don’t think that an examination of “approximately half the whales” (how approximate, I wonder? More than half or less than half?) which found that “about 40%” had evidence of human interaction such as ship strike or entanglement conclusively rules out the possible involvement of wind farm activities. If “approximately half” and “about 40%” means “ a bit less than” in each case (and I suspect it does) we are certainly talking about conclusive evidence for only one in five, and possibly even as little as one in six or seven of the affected whales. Also, failure to attribute whale mortality to offshore wind activities is not the same as offshore wind activities having no connection to whale mortality.

As regards the reliability of NOAA (which itself pushes climate change alarmism on a regular basis) I personally mistrust anything it says, since I found its monthly climate reports repeating the (highly inaccurate) claim that last year’s floods in Pakistan saw “about one third” of that country under water – it wasn’t.

One of the most shocking recent whale strandings was that referred to in the Guardian article of 16th July 2023 above. The Guardian said, inter alia:

The cause of the stranding is unknown but it is thought the pod may have followed one of the females….

…Human influence on the marine environment – including naval activities, oil and gas exploration, pollution and the climate crisis – has been blamed for an increase in the number of strandings in recent years. However, they can also result from natural causes such as illness, disease or injury. …

…Pilot whales are part of the dolphin family and are the cetacean species most susceptible to mass strandings.

It’s all there – “ naval activities, oil and gas exploration, pollution and the climate crisis”. What the Guardian article didn’t mention, however, is that at the time of the stranding, surveying work was being undertaken in connection with a proposed wind farm just three miles off the shore of the Isle of Lewis & Harris, and which is very controversial indeed.

Of course it’s possible that there is no connection, but if noise and activity from oil and gas exploration, from deep sea mining and from military sonar can all potentially explain whale strandings, what is so magical about offshore wind farms that they can’t possibly have the same effect on whales (and dolphins and porpoises)?

Greenpeace activists were my heroes when I was growing up. Not any more.

Atlantic Fishery Under Threat: Offshore Wind Farm Substations Secret, Silent Killers

From STOP THESE THINGS

The offshore wind industry is wiping out thousands of marine mammals and fish are its next victims. While plenty has been written about whales, dolphins, porpoises and seals being deafened by wind turbine construction activities (they don’t respond well to sonar and seismic blasting), less notice has been given to fish, crabs and other critters that make up the ocean ecosystem; and which also provide a healthy food resource for humans onshore.

In this piece, Jim Lovgren opens with the way ‘green’ energy is destroying the Atlantic’s marine mammals, including the critically endangered Northern Right Whale, and turned his attention to a less well-known phenomenon. The effect that the sub-stations – used to convert AC to DC allowing power to be transmitted back to shore (see above and below) – will have on America’s Atlantic fisheries.

Offshore Wind Electrical Substations; The Secret, Silent Killers
Fishery Nation
Jim Lovgren
3 July 2023

The marine mammal strandings that are taking place almost everyday along the US east coast are the most visible consequence of the Biden administration’s reckless disregard of all environmental safeguards that had been carefully crafted since the environmental movement started in the 1960’s.

Left by the wayside in their rush to meet artificially imposed production deadlines, are the Clean Water Act, Endangered Species Act, [ESA] and the National Environmental Policy Act, [NEPA]. A rogue and abhorrent federal Agency, BOEM, [Bureau of Ocean Energy Management], under the Interior Department, has highjacked Fishery Management and protection of our marine resources from the National Marine Fishery Service, [part of NOAA, and under control of the Commerce Department] and has thumbed their nose at any restraints that are legally required under both the ESA and NEPA. Embarrassingly, the cowards at the National Marine Fishery Service have stood by and watched as research vessels have been performing geologic surveys with high powered Sonar, and Seismic devices before they had their incidental take permits issued.

They have also authorized over 100,000 level B takes of marine mammals, and that’s just for a few projects, as they fully expect the offshore wind factories to cause the extinction of the critically endangered Northern Right Whale. Just ask Sean Hayes, from the NMFS protected species department, whose observations were ignored by BOEM, hence an ESA violation.

Despite government and wind supporters denying any proof that could link the unseen before amount of strandings to the coincidental use of geological sonar and seismic research, [usually only of a type performed by oil companies] in the near vicinity of the strandings, the evidence mounts.

This week, two Humpback Whales washed ashore in Martha’s Vineyard, coincidentally only a few days after Piledriving started at a nearby wind site. Piledriving of the turbine stanchions creates a 260 DBs level sound, that no amount of “Bubble Curtains” can contain. It is deadly. A few weeks before that beaches on the south shore of Nantucket had a carpet of dead crabs, clams, and other benthic organisms that are susceptible to seismic testing, which coincidentally was taking place nearby, [“sparkers” and sub- bottom profilers are seismic equipment]. The relationship of marine animal deaths while unsafe level industrial noises are being produced in the same vicinity are too numerous to ignore, worldwide. So, stop denying them.

Marine Noise pollution has been an increasing problem on an Oceanic level since the invention of the steam engine. Most of that noise increase was caused by increased vessel traffic, by increasingly larger ships, [and faster, so they could hit more Whales], but as the 20th century dawned, War became the largest noise increase ever. Torpedoes, depth charges, 16 inch shells exploding, and finally the creation of Sonar. There has never been an accounting of how many marine mammals died from the 20th century wars, but the amount would be staggering. Just as staggering would be the amount of marine mammals killed by the military, [that’s all countries] in training exercises, or testing of weapons, like at Bikini Atoll.

In an official BOEM document written by Pamela Middleton and Bethany Barnhart called, “Supporting National Environmental Policy Act Documentation for Offshore Wind Energy Development related to High Voltage Direct Current Cooling Systems” the authors contend that the only feasible cooling system for a HVDC Substation is a once through, or open system. The kind that is not allowed for new power plant construction, because of its devastating effects on aquatic life.

This embarrassing Official BOEM document concerning the effects of offshore wind substations admits it knows nothing about how many substations are planned, how big, and where they will be. NEPA concerns such as environmental and economic costs to other industries are totally ignored within the enormous expanse of information contained within the 4 ½ pages of actual text. Up until the Green new deal a NEPA supporting document would be hundreds, and even thousands of pages long, detailing all aspects of a proposed project.

From page #1 of the BOEM NEPA document; “Converting high voltage electricity from AC to DC for long range bulk transmission from offshore wind farms reduces losses of power experienced on AC transmission lines and becomes cost effective within 37 to 60 miles from shore [BVGassociates, 2019;ICF, 2018].

When electricity is generated offshore, it is converted from AC to DC for transmission from the offshore windfarm, then converted back to AC onshore for distribution to consumers. The offshore conversion from AC to DC is accomplished through an HVDC system located in the wind farm. The HVDC system converts AC to DC, creating a byproduct of heat in the process. For the system to operate continually, the portion of the conversion equipment that emits heat, called the “thyristor,” must be cooled.”

Keep in mind that this conversion process means that AC is converted to DC in an offshore substation, then DC is transmitted under the seabed to shore where it is converted back to an AC land-based substation. Which generates more heat into the atmosphere, and no mention is made of what cooling system will be used for the onshore substations, or where they will be located.

How big is a substation? From page 2, “Presently HVDC system structures for an offshore wind farm range from about 200 to 400 feet long, 140 to 350 feet wide, 80 to 300 feet high, and weigh several thousand tons [Mayflower Wind Energy, LLC, 2021; Sunrise Wind, LLC, 2021; Siemens, 2015; Kirchgeorg, et al, 2018]. These structures are likely to get larger as offshore wind farms grow and move further offshore.”

These structures are massive already, and may get bigger. What does that mean? How big is big? If an offshore site has 80 turbines how many substations are needed? One, two, ten? There is no mention in the document. How are they secured to the bottom? How many gallons of sea water would be circulated through a once through system per hour? How many degrees hotter would that dumped water be than it was before being used? What species of fish will be impinged and what is the economic effect on the fishing industry?

None of these basic NEPA information requirements are included. Instead, we get this in regard to impingement and entrainment; “Most filtration systems backflush filters to allow for continuous use, so the collected filtrates will eventually return to the ecosystem; however, larval species will be lost and will not grow to maturity.” {Woke-speak for they will be killed]. “The number of larval fish and invertebrates lost in the process is difficult to measure. Losses of larval food sources for other species is notable, in addition to the larval species that do not survive to maturity. It is unclear how many marine species do not mature to reproduce and provide fish and shellfish for human and animal consumption.” They might as well have added, “and we don’t care.”

The whole point of these wind turbines is to stop Global warming, yet a new study from Harvard concluded that warming continental temperatures could ensue from widespread wind energy, primarily through enhancement of low-level atmospheric mixing and interruption of radiative nighttime cooling. This net localized effect was quantified in 10 other studies.

In regard to the “warm” water discharged from an offshore substation, the BOEM document has this to say, “Temperatures of the discharge water have not been documented for the proposed wind farms on the OCS to date. The warmer outflow from HVDC is generally accepted as a minimal effect that will be absorbed and transition to ambient temperatures over time.” “Given the single point outlet within the large mass of surrounding ocean, effects from the warm water are likely to be extremely minimal. Similar conclusions have been made for any chemicals added to prevent growth within the seawater system.”

Those chemicals include sodium hypochlorite, used to kill any tiny marine life that might dare to attempt to grow within the system, at least it is noted that sodium hypochlorite would be used in the 10-200 parts per million, but it doesn’t say per million of what, assumed to be ocean water. So, the water will be heated substantially but to an unknown degree, while at the same time an anti-lifeacide chemical will be introduced to the marine environment, but don’t worry the ocean can absorb it all. Just like the good old days.

I think this BOEM NEPA document perfectly presents the Biden regime’s contempt for the environmental laws that have been put in place over the last half century to protect our wildlife and environment. This paper has a disclaimer inside stating the views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the opinions or policies of the US government, nor does mention of trade names and commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use.

BOEM should disclaim the whole document, pitiful as it is. I believe that this document was submitted in all its inadequacies on purpose to legally meet NEPA requirements concerning project submission timing, knowing that by the time any legal recourse could be taken, the issue would be moot. They are going full steam ahead and no stupid precautionary principle, or environmental law will stop them. The NRDC has provided us with the information proving how deadly “once through” cooling systems are, why are they even being proposed for usage? It is because they are cheaper, ignoring the environmental disaster they are creating, we must save the world. In reality though, it’s all about the Benjamin’s.
Fishery Nation

The Biggest Eco-Scandal In The World The Media And ‘Green’ Groups Are Ignoring

Climate Change Dispatch

By MICHAEL SHELLENBERGER 

A dead whale washed ashore on Takanassee Beach in New Jersey in the early evening yesterday. Police blocked off the area so tractors could be brought in to remove it.

“We were sitting on the beach yesterday, and I noticed it when people started running up to it,” said Soraya Nimaroff, who lives nearby. “I’m very sad. It is very sad.” [bold, emphasis, links added]

Yesterday marked the 60th known whale death on the East Coast since Dec 1, 2022. Whale strandings have increased markedly since 2016.

The North Atlantic right whales are headed for extinction. Their population has dropped to 340.

There have been 200 humpback strandings and 98 strandings of right whales since 2017.

“It caused us concern enough to ask, ‘What is happening?’” said Cindy Zipf, executive director of the Long Branch-based nonprofit Clean Ocean Action (COA). “We looked into what was different about this December and early January.”

The only thing she and other researchers found was offshore wind exploration.

“We looked at shipping, and shipping didn’t seem to be any different,” said Zipf. “The same fishermen were fishing. And the only thing we noticed was the number of IHAs that had been issued.

IHAs are “incidental harassment authorizations,” or permits to harass whales.

In the period since June 2022, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has bizarrely and cruelly given the wind industry 12 separate one-year IHAs that collectively permit the harassment of 190 critically endangered right whales.

Another ten applications for additional IHAs are currently pending.

According to NOAA, blunt and sharp force trauma killed the humpback whale found floating in Raritan Bay on May 31. Scientists found lacerations and broken bones across her body.

According to NOAA, blunt and sharp force trauma killed the humpback whale found floating in Raritan Bay on May 31. Scientists found lacerations and broken bones across her body.

But they’re lying.

And now we have the proof.

Read Save The Whales, Again here

Read more at Public

Fate Sealed: Government Greenlights Wind Industry to Kill 5,000 Whales, Dolphins & Seals

From STOP THESE THINGS

Wiping out hundreds of marine mammals is all in a day’s work for the offshore wind industry. And granting permits to do so, with complete impunity, appears to be the work of the US government.

The mindless slaughter of whales, dolphins, porpoises and sealed is completely legit, thanks to the government-backed licenses known as the ‘Incidental Harassment Authorization’.

As David Wojick reports below, the wind industry’s cruelty is only matched by its audacity.

NOAA proposes massively cruel offshore sonar survey
CFACT
David Wojick
5 June 2023

You would think that with all the uproar over whale deaths, NOAA and the offshore wind industry would be more careful about harassing huge numbers of marine mammals. On the contrary, NOAA’s latest proposal sets a new record for needless cruelty.

NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is taking comments on an outrageously destructive harassment proposal from Invenergy Wind off the coast of New Jersey, where whale deaths have been greatest. Here is the proposal: 

https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/incidental-take-authorization-invenergy-wind-offshore-llcs-site-characterization-surveys-new

It is called a “site characterization survey,” and it does include a new offshore wind development site that Invenergy picked up last year with a whopping bid of $645 million. That apparently buys a lot of Federal cooperation because this is nothing like a site survey.

You see, the site is a mere 131 square miles, while the proposed sonar blasting survey area is over 6,000 square miles. In other words, the site is a mere 2% of the survey area, so it is clearly not a site survey.

What is the 98% non-site survey for? There is no actual explanation, but it is labeled the Export Cable Route (ECR) area. There is no actual export cable route, so they are surveying every place it might conceivably go. Some of the ECR area is absurd as a potential cable location, especially that which is as far out to sea as the project or further.

This possible-cable area is enormous. It runs from New York City to south of Atlantic City and from the Jersey Shore to over 50 miles out to sea. The front page of the NMFS proposal linked above has a map, conveniently showing both the tiny site area and the huge ECR area.

Not surprisingly, given this huge area, the predicted marine mammal harassment numbers are appalling:

138 Whales

1,900 Seals

950 Porpoises

1,742 Dolphins

Total = 4,730 or just under 5,000 supposedly protected marine mammals

This is needless cruelty personified. They clearly have no idea where the cables will go. That will be determined by who takes the Power Purchase Agreement, if anybody, and where they can come ashore to deliver the juice.

The results of this incredibly destructive 6,000-square-mile survey will be almost entirely irrelevant when that happens. All that will matter is what lies between the project site and the landing point. Obviously, the cable route survey should wait until that location is known, thus saving thousands of protected critters from harmful harassment.

That NMFS should propose this huge amount of needless harassment is an issue in itself. NMFS, known simply as NOAA Fisheries, seems to have abandoned its mission to protect marine mammals in favor of reckless offshore wind industrialization.

Here is their mission statement: “NOAA Fisheries is responsible for the stewardship of the nation’s ocean resources and their habitat.” These are living resources to be cared for, not industrial wind facilities.

In particular, NMFS is supposed to enforce the Marine Mammals Protection Act. Allowing the pointless harassment of thousands of marine mammals is the opposite of protection.

They cannot have failed to notice that this is not a site characterization survey. NMFS should have rejected the Invenergy proposal as absurdly overreaching and cruel.

Even worse, NMFS claims that this mass harassment of thousands of protected critters is not an environmental impact, so it does not fall under NEPA. Harassment is clearly an adverse impact, plus it can easily lead to deadly behavior. For example, it includes causing deafness which in one of the world’s busiest shipping areas is obviously life-threatening.

Given this absurdly cruel proposal, NOAA Fisheries needs to be redirected back to its mission. To begin with, the Invenergy proposal must be rejected.
CFACT

Offshore wind foes in New Jersey flex muscles

From CFACT

By Bonner Cohen, Ph. D. 

As dead whales continue to wash up on New Jersey’s beaches, Garden State officials are hoping to issue the final permits in the coming months enabling construction to begin later this year on the state’s first offshore wind facility.

Ocean Wind 1 is a project of a U.S. subsidiary of Danish wind developer Orsted. Upon completion, it would feature 98 giant turbines located 15 miles off the coast of Ocean City and Atlantic City. It is the first of three such projects planned for the Jersey Shore in the near future, with even more on the drawing board in the years to come.

While acknowledging certain environmental challenges associated with the project, New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) in April issued a key approval for Ocean Wind 1. That decision is now being challenged in court by three groups opposed to the project. Save Long Beach Island, Defend Brigantine Beach, and Protect Our Coast NJ filed an appeal on June 23 in the Supreme Court of New Jersey, saying the DEP’s decision is inconsistent with state coastal management rules.

Threat to Marine Habitat

Bruce Afran, an attorney for the groups, told the Associated Press that the DEP “has acknowledged the wind turbines will destroy marine habitat, compress the sea floor, severely damage maritime communities, cause commercial fishing stocks to decline, and injure the beach economy.”

“Yet the state persists in the bizarre belief that this massive engineering project will not injure our state’s coastal zone, one of the most important marine communities on the East Coast and the core of New Jersey’s $47 billion tourist industry.”

To buttress his plaintiffs’ case, Afran cited numerous sections of the DEP’s April decision on Ocean Wind 1, “acknowledging potential negative impacts on the surf clam industry; changes to the ocean floor from wind turbine foundations and equipment; and the regular use of the area as a migrating channel for five species of whales, including the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale,” the AP reported.

The appeal follows a decision by the investigative arm of Congress, the Congressional Accountability Office, to study the impact of offshore wind on the environment and other areas – something opponents have long sought, the AP notes.

Orsted, in addition to Ocean Wind 1, has another offshore wind project making its way through New Jersey’s approval process. The Danish renewable energy developer now finds itself potentially benefitting handsomely from a bill under consideration by Garden State lawmakers. Legislation pushed by Sen. Bob Smith, Middlesex County Democrat, would allow Orsted to keep federal tax credits it otherwise would have to return to ratepayers in order to counter what the bill’s proponents say are lingering economic effects from the COVID-19 pandemic and still-high inflation.

Brian Lipman, director of the New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel, warned that what was good for the developer was not necessarily good for the ratepayer.

“There should be no doubt that this bill will increase the amount the developer earns on this project and will result in higher … prices being paid by ratepayers. That is the inevitable result of this bill,” he was quoted by AP as saying.

The final language of the bill is still being hashed out as lawmakers scramble to deal with what is seen as a sweetheart deal for Orsted and potentially a raw deal for ratepayers.

Meanwhile, the number of whale deaths along the East Coast since December has risen to 50. Uncertainty over what’s behind these deaths has led to calls for a pause in offshore wind development until the cause of the spike in mortality can be ascertained.

Author

  • Bonner Cohen, Ph. D.
  • Bonner R. Cohen, Ph. D., is a senior policy analyst with CFACT, where he focuses on natural resources, energy, property rights, and geopolitical developments.
  • Articles by Dr. Cohen have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Investor’s Busines Daily, The New York Post, The Washington Examiner, The Washington Times, The Hill, The Epoch Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Miami Herald, and dozens of other newspapers around the country.
  • He has been interviewed on Fox News, Fox Business Network, CNN, NBC News, NPR, BBC, BBC Worldwide Television, N24 (German-language news network), and scores of radio stations in the U.S. and Canada.
  • He has testified before the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, and the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee. Dr. Cohen has addressed conferences in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Bangladesh.
  • He has a B.A. from the University of Georgia and a Ph. D. – summa cum laude – from the University of Munich.