Courts have a tendency to get the unvarnished truth out, such as the US government’s cover-up of wind industry’s wholesale whale slaughter.
Everyone expects the wind industry to lie – it’s in its interest to do so, indeed its very existence depends upon a series of falsehoods – but governments are usually held to slightly higher standards.
In the case of the environmental destruction caused by America’s offshore wind industry, both industry and its government enablers are equally complicit.
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has been running cover for the wind industry since it began the construction and operation of industrial wind turbines along the Atlantic coast of the USA.
Now a group has issued the notice required to take them to Court in order to expose the lie for all to see.
Coalition files intent to sue federal agencies to stop whale-killing Virginia wind project
CFACT
Press release
14 November 2023
WASHINGTON, DC (November 13, 2023) — The Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) and The Heartland Institute today announced that they were filing with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) a 60 Day Notice of Intent to Sue letter for a violation of the Endangered Species Act. The violation is contained in a defective “biological opinion,” which authorizes the construction of the Virginia Offshore Wind Project (VOW).
The 60-day notice is required by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) for parties who wish to commence litigation against BOEM for failure to provide adequate protection of the North Atlantic right whale and other endangered species. The North Atlantic right whale is listed as “critically endangered” by the governments of both the Commonwealth of Virginia and the United States. Numerous studies by federal and environmental organizations have found that only about 350 North Atlantic right whales remain in existence.
CFACT and Heartland assert that the Biological Opinion issued by the NMFS fails to consider the cumulative impact of the entire East Coast offshore wind program ordered by the Biden administration, and ignores the “best scientific information available” about the endangered population of the North Atlantic right whale. The biological opinion found that the VOW would not cause a single death of that species of whale over its 30-year projected lifetime — although it did acknowledge the wind project could result in Level B harassment. That level could, according to NMFS, result in indirect death, necessitating the need for a “take” permit, which authorizes the “harassment” and potential killing of the North Atlantic right whale.
“This letter officially puts BOEM on notice that CFACT is prepared to file suit in order to expose the agency’s clear violation of federal law in failing to protect the North Atlantic right whale,” said Craig Rucker, president of CFACT. “By refusing to consider the cumulative impact of the dozens of industrial offshore wind facilities, consisting of several thousand individual turbines planned for the East Coast, it adopted a piecemeal approach, which only considered each individual offshore wind project in isolation. This is clearly a ploy to artificially reduce the total impact of these projects on the North Atlantic Right Whale. This obvious violation of federal law was ignored by the oversight agencies but will not be tolerated by the courts.”
“We need to send a message to BOEM and NMFS that there will be legal consequences if they violate legal requirements for protection of the North Atlantic Right Whale,” said H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D., director of the Arthur B. Robinson Center on Climate and Environmental Policy at The Heartland Institute. “The Biden administration’s plan to industrialize the oceans of the East Coast must follow the law, and we will intervene, if necessary, to make sure that the North Atlantic Right Whale continues to exist as a species.”
“BOEM has admitted that it produced noise control regulations for the North Atlantic right whale that were based on guesswork — not on the ‘best available science’ — as required by law,” said Collister Johnson, senior policy Advisor for CFACT. “They have funded ongoing studies that will finally produce information necessary to determine the noise impacts of offshore wind factories on baleen whales, such as the North Atlantic right whale. The results will not be available until 2025, at the earliest. This is a further violation of federal law, in addition to ignoring the cumulative impacts.
“There is a reason why Dominion’s stock price has declined by 50 percent over the past year,” Johnson added. “Investors know that Dominion’s wind project is a costly, risky gamble that has already driven most other East Coast wind developers to either renegotiate their utility contracts or abandon their projects altogether. If Dominion decided tomorrow to abandon this project, as it should, its stock price would improve dramatically, and a huge financial cloud hanging over its future would be removed.”
The 60-day notice letter instructs the federal government agencies to take corrective action to remedy the alleged violations. If no corrective action is taken, the signatories of the letter are allowed to seek relief through the courts. The most likely venue for this litigation would be the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
The firm of Gatzke, Dillon, and Ballance has filed the letter as counsel for the CFACT and Heartland. The firm is currently representing plaintiffs in ongoing litigation against BOEM and NMFS, who are opposing construction of offshore wind projects in Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York.
Earlier this year, more than two dozen large dead whales washed up on the shores of New York, New Jersey, and Virginia, directly following 11 offshore sonar mapping activities conducted by wind developers. These “site characterization” studies use high-powered sonar pulses to determine the proper areas for placing the wind turbines. Sonar mapping has been found to interfere with the hearing capabilities of marine mammals. Environmental groups have successfully sued the Navy to restrict sonar mapping being conducted in the Pacific Ocean.
The 60-day notice adds to the risks faced by Dominion Energy as it attempts to build an offshore wind generation facility that would be the largest such project of its kind in the world. Siemens Energy, which has been designated by Dominion as the supplier of the huge 14MW turbines for the project, recently announced a write-down of 2.4 billion for the 3rd quarter, leading to an annual loss of €4.5 Billion, due to costly mechanical failures in its new wind turbines. The company has said its turbine failures are a “quality issue” which “will take years to fix.”
Measured in megawatts, some 80 percent of the proposed East Coast wind projects have either been abandoned or are in the process of trying to renegotiate their power purchase agreements.
The Heartland Institute is a national nonprofit organization founded in 1984 and headquartered in Arlington Heights, Illinois. Its mission is to discover, develop, and promote free-market solutions to social and economic problems. For more information, visit our website or call 312/377-4000.
CFACT is a national non-profit organization founded in 1985 and based in Washington DC, which believes that the power of markets and safe, proven technologies can offer humanity practical solutions to the world’s most pressing concerns.
CFACT


im Skea Hear this out loud Jim Skea, the new head of the UN’s IPCC, said it’s not helpful to imply that a temperature rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius is an existential threat to humanity.Jul 30, 2023
Don’t overstate 1.5 degrees C threat, new IPCC head says – DW https://www.dw.com/en/climate-change-do-not-overstate-15-degrees-threat/a-66386523#:~:text=Jim%20Skea%2C%20the%20new%20head,an%20existential%20threat%20to%20humanity.
When did Greenpeace change their mantra from “Save the Whales” to “Screw the Whales!”
First there was the wholesale green slaughter of eagles along with everything else that flies.
The Denver Eagle Repository currently receives over 3000 eagles annually and their origin has been a green energy top secret for over 25 years. New totals since 1995 are now about 69,000. Most of the eagle carcasses shipped FedEx overnight in insulated crates and are from wind farms.
These are just American totals. Worldwide, turbines have killed at least 3 times this amount.
In California, the Golden Eagle is an endangered species. Criminally fraudulent research and government corruption is keeping this a secret as well.
The recycling business better figure out how to deal with this situation in an environmentally friendly way.
Does anyone else see the parallel tactics to what the wind industry has done regarding denial of harm to residents in communities where onshore turbines are operating? Substitute the word harassment for annoyance.
Were studies done by the wind industry before the turbine project was constructed to insure that there would be no harm?