'Pioneer' Canadian offshore wind farm announced in Halifax - Action News
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Nova Scotia

'Pioneer' Canadian offshore wind farm announced in Halifax

Nova East Wind wants to install 20 to 25 floating wind turbines 25 kilometres off Goldboro, N.S., on the province's eastern shore and run up to 400 megawatts ashore to the grid by the end of the decade.

Nova East Wind wants to install 20-25 floating wind turbines 25 km off Goldboro, N.S.

A man in a suit jacket speaks before a microphone with an offshore wind sign in the background.
Ambroise Wattez,SBM director of project development, says the project will cost between $1 billion and $1.5-billion. (CBC)

Promoters unveiled the first proposed offshore wind project forNova Scotia in Halifax on Wednesday.

Nova East Wind wants to install 20 to 25 floating wind turbines 25 kilometres off Goldboro on the province's Eastern Shore and supplyup to 400 megawatts of electricity to the province'spowergrid by the end of the decade.

The project would represent about 20 per centof Nova ScotiaPower's current generatingcapacity, which is 2400 megawatts.

The company is a partnership between majority owner SBM Offshore, a global ocean energy service company based in Amsterdam, and developer DP Energy of Ireland.

Ambroise Wattez,SBM director of project development, told reporters the project will cost between $1 billion and $1.5 billion.

The electricity is intended for domestic consumption to replace energycurrently generated by Nova Scotia Power's coal-fired plants, which must close by 2030. The electricity would be transportedalongthe ocean bottom by an undersea cable. The route followsan abandoned offshore gas pipeline corridor.

It is not for export likeso-called "green hydrogen" in which electricity is used to convertwater into hydrogen orammonia that's thenshipped to international marketsand converted back to electricity.

Both Canada and Nova Scotia are promoting offshore wind. Since there are no regulations in place yet to permit offshore wind projects, the federal and provincialgovernments are jointly developing rules to govern them.

Regulations are expected by 2025.

A map shows the eastern part of Nova Scotia and there is a highlighted area in the water off the eastern shore.
Nova East Wind wants to install 20 to 25 floating wind turbines 25 kilometres off Goldboro, N.S., on the province's Eastern Shore. (CBC)

Nova East has already begun survey work and hosted an open house on Tuesday saying it needs to get started.

"If you want to deliver before 2030 you've got tostart early," said Wattez.

"We've been working behind the scenes for two years to effectively demonstrate that there is a path to do it. I also think the authorities also need some kind of pioneer to say 'yes, we propose to do that.' That's all we can do is propose the project and the authorities will decide."

The ocean footprint of its turbines each towering several hundred metrestall would be roughly 150 square kilometres, Nova East CEO Simon Dipietro said.

Compensation for fishermen displaced by the proposed wind fields has not been determined. Officials from both companies said Wednesday at a media event that they are committed to working with First Nations andlocal communities to come up withsome form of compensation for work disrupted or displaced by the wind farm.

That has yet to be worked out, along withthe price of the electricity produced. But the promoters are expecting to earn a premium price.

The company said it currently expects it needs to earn about $100 per megawatt hour. That'smore expensive than the price paid for onshore wind projects, which is about $53 per megawatt hour.

The company said those costs willlikelycome down over the nextdecade.