Ontario Okays Wind Power in the Great Lakes

Tapping the gales of the Great Lakes for electricity has never been done. Until now. The Ontario government has just lifted its moratorium on developing offshore wind farms, and there are already 14 projects waiting in the wings.
The moratorium has been in place since November 2006. NIMBYism the culprit. Residents feared the turbines would be giant eye soars, blocking their majestic lake views and shrinking their property values.
But the government came to its senses, fed, most likely, by common sense. For one, Ontario is chasing a target of doubling its renewable energy sources by 2025. And two, the economics of offshore wind in the Great Lakes is just too compelling to brush off, as revealed through recent reports.
One such study was conducted by Helimax Energy, Inc., The study (pdf) concluded that the Great Lakes region-- Lakes Huron, Superior, Erie and Ontario -- could generate up to 47,000 megawatts of clean electricity. That's nearly double Ontario's existing power capacity.
Ohio is already beginning to move on developing offshore wind capacity in its neck of Lake Erie. Off of Cleveland. And the shift out of Canada is likely to advance the ball in all the Great Lake states.
The decision comes on the heels of the UK's annoucement for a total offshore wind power revolution. The UK goal is unprecedented: offshore wind has been called on to power 50% of its total electricty -- and every single British home -- by 2020.
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