(File Photo) OCEAN CITY, N.J. - New Jersey utility regulators used a controversial law Friday enabling them to bypass local authorities and grant approvals needed for an offshore wind project to proceed.The state Board of Public Utilities granted Orsted, the Danish wind energy developer, approvals toward several easements and permits that authorities in Cape May County had refused to grant the company.They used an amendment to New Jersey's offshore wind law passed in 2021 and signed into law by Democratic Gov.
Phil Murphy removing most local control over where offshore wind projects come ashore. The law enables an offshore wind developer to apply to the utilities board for an order superseding local control over such projects."I just want to assure the public that we don't take these kinds of actions lightly," said Joseph Fiordaliso, the board's president. "There has to be a definite public need for the board to even consider this kind of action.
This is something that the majority of us believes will benefit the citizens of New Jersey."Fiordaliso said the route of the proposed transmission line will not harm Ocean City or Cape May County aesthetically or economically.
The power cable will run from wind turbines that the company says will be located 15 miles offshore and come ashore in Ocean City, where it will run underground along existing roadways and connect to the electrical grid at the site of the former B.L.