EPA signs off on Port of Albany’s dredging plan for wind turbine tower factory

BETHLEHEM – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has signed off on plans to dredge in the Hudson River off the shores of Beacon Island, where the Port of Albany is building an offshore wind turbine tower manufacturing plant.

The EPA was one of two federal agencies that had expressed concerns with a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dredging permit that is required to build a 500-foot wharf at the water’s edge of the 82-acre Beacon Island site, which is an old landfill.

The EPA had complained to the Army Corps that the dredging plan was too environmentally damaging to the local sturgeon habitat and that the dredging permit should be denied if changes weren’t made.

The Port of Albany has proposed establishing a man-made habitat across the river at Schodack Island State Park to mitigate the potential damage of the dredging to the sturgeon habitat.

The EPA and the Port of Albany have been going back and forth on the issue since June, and completed several rounds of talks and exchanging of information until Dec. 1, when the Port of Albany provided the EPA with its final proposal.

At that point, the EPA said it was satisfied with the new dredging plan, according to a Jan. 25 letter the EPA sent to the Army Corps office in New York City.

“Following review of the applicant’s response, EPA determined the applicant has satisfactorily addressed EPA’s comments,” Richard Balla, supervisorย  of the EPA’s watershed management branch, wrote in the letter.

The Port of Albany didn’t immediately have copies of the updated proposals that were approved by the EPA available to review.

The Port of Albany is building the wind turbine tower factory on Beacon Island for a consortium of companies that are building wind farms off the shore of Long Island under a contract with NYSERDA, the state’s renewable energy agency.ย 

The…

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