'A massive enterprise': California's offshore wind farms are on a fast track [View all]
EUREKA If the American West represents the geography of hope, as author Wallace Stegner wrote, then what better place than Californias far north to illustrate the eternal tension between the limitless potential of big ideas and the brutal disappointment of broken dreams?
The Golden States verdant North Coast, a great empire of trees and home to the Yurok, the states largest Native American tribe, has seen centuries of boom and bust riches taken from above and beneath the earth. When gold miners brought their nuggets from the foothills to the coast, Eurekas broad bay became a bustling transit hub.
After the gold was gone, it was replaced with timber, red gold. The regions massive redwoods made many locals rich; when the forests were clear cut, the pulp mills came. They, too, went bust. Dams harnessed the regions rushing rivers to produce electricity, causing the collapse of its prized salmon runs. A green cannabis revolution arrived, promising to bring a balm to this depressed place. But a glut of legal weed flooded the market, leaving the plants to wither along with the growers dreams of wealth.
Now, once again, the siren call of capturing the North Coasts natural resources beckons dreamers and speculators, this time the treasure lies far off the rugged coast of Humboldt and Del Norte counties. Its promise: The Pacific Ocean which feeds us, modulates our weather and delivers our goods will provide clean, renewable energy from its powerful winds.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2024/08/12/a-massive-enterprise-californias-offshore-wind-farms-are-on-a-fast-track/