Last month came news that New Jersey's first offshore wind farm took another step forward when a state agency awarded a $4 million grant to Garden State Offshore Energy to build a facility off Ocean City, NJ. A grid of 96 turbines will generate enough juice for 125,000 homes- the first of the turbines could begin generating power by 2012.
Meanwhile in Virginia, on Wednesday this week, Minerals Management Service Director Randall Luthi will announces the first of a multi-step process for oil and gas leasing offshore Virginia. Instead of wind farms, Virginia Beach gets offshore rigs, pipelines, and stinky refineries. Instead of tapping into the Class 3 and higher winds that could easily power over 20% of the Commonwealth, and is part of a clean energy economic push that stands to bring in more than 4 times as many jobs to the Commonwealth than anything brought in via the oil/gas industry, Virginia is going to pursue a practice that contributes greatly to global warming and the sea level rise that will cause Hampton Roads to be underwater and that much more vulnerable to storm surges.
Now that's certainly moving Virginia forward.... NOT!