11/25/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/25/2024 09:23
The Biden Administration established a national target of generating 30 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind by 2030-enough to power 22,500,000 homes- and 100 GW by 2050-enough to power 75,000,000 homes. Interconnecting these offshore wind projects to the onshore power grid will require robust transmission development-building a substantial amount of new infrastructure and expensive upgrades to existing infrastructure.
Offshore transmission lines allow energy generated by offshore wind to reach the onshore grid-our homes, businesses, and schools. When constructing these transmission lines, the benthos (the organisms that reside on the ocean floor) is directly affected, as these power lines are typically buried in the seabed.
The benthos literally shoulders marine ecosystems. The benthos plays an important role in nutrient cycling, food webs, and ecosystem health. The benthos even underpins food sources for large predators, and provides nursery areas for their young. Such species could not survive without the fish, invertebrates, and other marine life that depend on a healthy benthos to reproduce, grow, and thrive. Benthic habitats also support many economically important species. In 2022 alone the U.S. Atlantic lobster fishery harvested 120 million pounds of lobster, representing $519 million in value.
Despite this, benthic habitats are both understudied and under threat. There has been a 29 percent loss of global seagrass habitats, an 85 percent loss of oyster reefs, and widespread and increasing coral reef depletion. The destruction and depletion of the benthos puts the vital ecosystem services they provide, and the valuable industries the benthos supports, at risk.
Natural seasonal variations and climate change also impact the benthic ecosystem, and the animals that live there.
With all these factors affecting the benthos, balancing the evolving needs of wildlife and much-needed transmission development is crucial.
Blue-banded goby swimming over the seabed. Credit: Jeff Foote/Getty ImagesIn National Wildlife Federation's new report, Wires and Wildlife: Offshore Transmission Development and the Benthos, we explore how the U.S. can responsibly develop offshore transmission to balance the need for development with the evolving needs of the benthos. This report provides recommendations for industry and decision makers to balance the need for transmission development with the climate crisis, the biodiversity crisis, and the needs of the marine ecosystem.
Key Findings
Learn more about NWF's offshore transmission advocacy here.