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FOR INFORMATION about Maine's Ocean Energy Task Force, go online to www.maine.gov
International energy companies are looking at Maine to test new designs for massive wind turbines and support structures that would float in deep water, out of sight of the coast and in line with the strongest breezes.
Two of the businesses have been attending monthly meetings of Maine's Ocean Energy Task Force, which must identify up to five offshore demonstration sites before year's end.
The task force is considering a large amount of information, everything from water depths and wind speed to whale and bird migration routes. The goal is to locate areas that have robust wind but where turbines wouldn't bother fishermen, boaters, coastal residents and wildlife.
Successful test sites could make Maine a global contender for billions of dollars in energy investment over the next decade or so. They also would be a proving ground for the vision that offshore wind can someday heat Maine homes and power automobiles, freeing the state from dependence on petroleum.
Wind farms in Europe's shallow coastal waters have become common and are expanding. The United States is way behind in rolling out this technology, but shallow-water wind farms are pending along the East Coast in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey and Delaware.
Meanwhile, engineers have grander visions. They have begun testing platforms that weigh hundreds of tons, float in more than 100 feet of water and support towers that stand nearly the length of a football field.
On a commercial scale, a floating, deep-water wind farm could have more than 100 turbines and generate the electricity equivalent of a large gas or nuclear power plant.
Prototypes have been placed off Norway and Italy, and are planned for Portugal and the United Kingdom. In the United States, demonstrations are proposed in Massachusetts and Oregon.
Maine has so far been left on the sidelines,>>>


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