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They disagree on offshore wind, but they鈥檙e working together to fight disinformation

A close-up shot of a women with long brown hair wearing a blue shirt holding a wireless microphone.
Roman Battaglia
/
JPR News
ThinkPlace US Executive Director Michelle Carrillo, and one of the founding members of the Coalition for Common Ground, December 17, 2024.

A new coalition has been formed to fight disinformation about floating offshore wind on the West Coast. The group has different opinions about the energy source, but they鈥檙e still working together to get the facts.

At Southwestern Oregon Community College in Coos Bay earlier this month, about two dozen people met for a new conference all about the offshore wind industry.

They came to learn about the science behind offshore wind, the burgeoning industry on the West Coast and how organizations are advocating for their interests.

鈥淓veryone felt they were lacking information, which wasn鈥檛 just a feeling, we are severely lacking information and ways to even learn how we feel about this project,鈥 said Rachael Smith from the climate-focused organization Redwood CORE Hub.

Smith was talking about the other major topic at the conference: disinformation.

Take one look at the debate around offshore wind, and you鈥檒l find a deluge of information, some of it fact-based, and some of it not. It鈥檚 spread far and wide by influential figures.

Incoming President Donald Trump has talked about several theories around wind turbines, including that they "are driving the whales crazy" or that they cause cancer.

Those are exactly the kinds of theories people like Sara Swett are trying to counter.

鈥淭his focus on a potential issue that hasn't been proven like the impact to whales from offshore wind surveying is actually drawing attention and resources away from the real documented threats, which have been vessel strikes and entanglement in fishing gear or marine debris,鈥 Swett said.

Swett works for Oregon Sea Grant, a federally funded program at Oregon State University that uses research and public education to address the needs of coastal communities.

Swett said there are new concerns that come up with the development of floating offshore wind. But it鈥檚 important that accurate information is available.

Sometimes a big challenge can be getting people to trust where the information is coming from. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is the federal agency responsible for leasing areas of ocean for offshore wind development. Swett said the way that agency has engaged with the public has sown distrust in other agencies.

鈥淧eople have a bad taste in their mouth from engaging with BOEM so they're less trusting of these other federal agencies like NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), who don't have any regulatory say in the offshore wind process,鈥 said Swett.

that the recent high level of whale strandings on the East Coast are caused by activities related to offshore wind. Swett said that NOAA has an obligation to protect these species, and offer mitigation measures to BOEM. But despite this, she said that people don鈥檛 trust the agency because they lump all the federal government together.

Providing accurate information is a goal for many people at this conference. Some are part of a new group, called the Coalition for Common Ground. Michelle Carrillo, Executive Director of the consultancy firm ThinkPlace US and one of the founding members of the group, said this media frenzy about whale deaths was a big motivator for her.

鈥淔or me, that was one of those moments where I was like, 鈥楾his is frustrating to see this continue to get picked up and perpetuated,鈥 she said.

"People have a bad taste in their mouth from engaging with BOEM so they're less trusting of these other federal agencies like NOAA."

Carrillo and her partners are trying to fight this disinformation with facts.

But it鈥檚 important to note, they don鈥檛 agree on whether offshore wind is worth it.

One person is a council member of the Tolowa Dee-ni鈥 nation, a tribe that鈥檚 formally opposed to offshore wind.

鈥淣one of us come at it from the same place,鈥 Carillo said. 鈥淎nd so I think that was also something that brought us together, was the discussion of, 鈥榟ow do we find common ground?鈥欌

A lot of this disinformation has blown in from the East Coast, where wind turbine development has been going on for much longer.

looked into the sources of all this disinformation. The results were not surprising. Much of the funding behind the opposition groups came from those with close ties to the oil and gas industry, including billionaire Charles Koch and fossil fuel lobbyists.

A connections chart showing different colored bubbles with names in them and connections with each other.
Brown University's Climate and Development Lab
Brown University's map showing the many connections between climate denial organizations and anti-offshore wind groups on the East Coast.

David Petrie from the coastal advocacy group OCEAN Winds said he noticed a shift in the conversation around offshore wind around 19 months ago. He said his initial conversations with fishers were very productive.

鈥淚nitially, their comments were, 鈥榠t's a big ocean,鈥 and, 鈥榯here's space for the offshore wind industry.鈥 But after the narrative was streamed into the press and the consistency of that message, and then engaging the tribes who joined in that messaging, it just obviously resulted in too much risk for developers to invest in Oregon.鈥

Two leases for offshore wind energy areas off the coast of Southern Oregon were scheduled for last year. But BOEM paused the auction after too many developers pulled out.

Rachael Smith from Redwood CORE Hub said it鈥檚 not that people are necessarily opposed to offshore wind, it鈥檚 that sometimes their reasons aren鈥檛 based in truth.

A woman with long brown hair and a grey sweater holding a presenter mouse in one hand and a wireless microphone in the other. Behind her on the screen in a whale.
Roman Battaglia
/
JPR News
Oregon Sea Grant Marine Renewable Energy & Communities Extension Specialist Sara Swett at the Winds of Change conference December 17, 2024.

鈥淚 think that people have a lot of well founded fears, and that there is information out there to assuage some of those fears that isn't necessarily being helpfully promoted and spread and widely understood,鈥 she said.

Smith said there are some very real and valid reasons to be wary of offshore wind, especially in this region. She said her community in Humboldt County has been the victim of extractive industries again and again, from the gold rush to timber to cannabis. Many people are worried that the offshore wind industry could again swoop into the region, damaging the local environment as these turbines are constructed and shipped out to sea to meet the energy demands of large population centers hundreds of miles away.

Getting the science and the facts out there is the best way to combat this misinformation. Sara Swett said getting off social media and holding more events in-person is a great way to provide a space for people to ask questions and learn the reality about offshore wind development.

鈥淭hey could be simple, or they could be complex, but people really just need a space to be able to ask questions on the topics that they're concerned about,鈥 she said.

The Oregon Sea Grant plans to work with the state as they continue to for offshore wind development. That process will continue through this year, offering opportunities for the public to learn more, in-person, about this new industry that may soon appear on the horizon along the west coast.

Roman Battaglia is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. After graduating from Oregon State University, Roman came to JPR as part of the Charles Snowden Program for Excellence in Journalism in 2019. He then joined Delaware Public Media as a Report For America fellow before returning to the JPR newsroom.