Here are the morning’s top stories on Tuesday, October 22, 2024…
- Earlier this year, state energy officials approved a strategic master plan to start developing enormous offshore wind farms in the waters off the coast, with hundreds of wind turbines each the size of the Eiffel Tower sitting atop floating platforms. But what’s on tap for the growing industry?
- It’s day 2 of a strike by thousands of Kaiser Permanente mental health care workers in Southern California. More than 100 picketed outside the healthcare provider’s medical center on Sunset Blvd. Monday.
- Health officials in Merced County have confirmed its first human case of bird flu.
California Looks To Offshore Wind As Next Green Energy Source
In July, the California Energy Commission unanimously approved a sweeping plan to develop a massive floating offshore wind industry in ocean waters — a first-of-its-kind undertaking that will require billions in public and private investments and could transform parts of the coast.
The new state plan sets the path for harnessing wind power from hundreds of giant turbines, each as tall as a 70-story building, floating in the ocean about 20 miles off Humboldt Bay and Morro Bay. The untapped energy is expected to become a major power source as California electrifies vehicles and switches to clean energy.
Adam Stern, Executive Director of Offshore Wind California, an industry group, outlines the next steps now that the plan has been unveiled. “The two next most important steps have to do with ports and transmission in ports. We need to get the areas in our ports ready to support offshore wind so they can withstand the weight of the towers and turbines that will be assembled on them,” Stern said. “We also need to develop the supply chain that will be centered in perhaps as many as a dozen ports along California’s coast.”
The Energy Commission’s plan estimates that just the work to upgrade California’s ports will cost $11-$12 billion, much of it publicly funded. The plan identifies the large ports of Humboldt, Long Beach and Los Angeles as viable for storing, staging and assembling parts needed for offshore wind operations.
Kaiser Mental Health Workers Hit The Picket Line In Los Angeles
Thousands of Kaiser Permanente mental health care workers are picketing for a second day across Southern California.