U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill won the governorâs race in New Jersey on Tuesday running on a platform of keeping electricity prices down. Environmental groups see Sherrillâs election as a triumph for the Garden Stateâs struggling offshore wind sector.
Sherrill, a four-term Democrat and a U.S. Navy veteran, arrived on the political scene in 2017 and advocated for offshore wind projects on Capitol Hill. As a gubernatorial candidate, she was one of only three Democrats who explicitly endorsed offshore wind on campaign websites early in the race.
Her Republican opponent, Jack Ciattarelli, ran on a promise to ban future offshore wind development. His campaign website sells ââstop offshore windâ tote bags, t-shirts, stickers, and beverage koozies. Sherrill handily beat Ciattarelli, winning 56% to 43% at press time.
âIn-state produced power through offshore wind and other renewable technologies is the only path forward to ensure carbon reduction while prioritizing price stability, economic growth, and resource adequacy,â said Paulina OâConnor, executive director of the New Jersey Offshore Wind Alliance, an advocacy group whose work is funded in part by wind developers.
Sherrill will take office next year without any offshore wind projects operational or under construction along the stateâs roughly 130 miles of coastline. Thatâs in stark contrast to the other East Coast states that, like New Jersey, have incentivized offshore wind development through tax breaks and have planned grid and clean-energy goals around the sectorâs growth. Massachusetts, Virginia, New York, and Rhode Island all have installations completed or currently underway.
New Jerseyâs incumbent Phil Murphy, also a Democrat, was once a fierce proponent of offshore wind but has ostensibly distanced himself from the sector in recent months as President Donald Trumpâs war on offshore wind proved, in some ways, insurmountable for a lame-duck governor.
The Trump administration has frozen the permitting pipeline for all of New Jerseyâs earlier-stage offshore projects. Atlantic Shores, the stateâs only fully approved wind farm, had one of its federal permits revoked in March by the Environmental Protection Agency. Shell, the projectâs codeveloper, officially withdrew from the project last week.
As governor, Sherrillâs ability to counter federal anti-wind policies will be limited. But she can make sure the state remains a player in the industry, which is still advancing in nearby New York. In that state, one project, South Fork Wind, is fully operational, and another, Empire Wind, is under construction.
Sherrill, for example, could expand funding for programs that train workers for wind jobs. She could increase legal pressure against the Trump administration for obstructing certain projects, as Rhode Island and Connecticut have done. New Jerseyâs Attorney General Matthew Platkin, along with 17 other attorneys general, is already suing the Trump administration over its broad-reaching executive order that froze federal permitting for wind power.
Her campaign promise to freeze New Jerseyansâ utility rates through a State of Emergency declaration on Day 1 and to push back on federal overreach signifies a willingness to come out fighting.
âGovernor-elect Sherrill campaigned on the need for bold action to reduce family energy costs. [The American Clean Power Association] welcomes the Governor-electâs recognition that clean power is key to meeting demand and keeping costs low,â said Jason Grumet, CEO of the trade group, in a statement released shortly after Sherrillâs acceptance speech on Tuesday night.
In January, Sherrill will take the reins from Murphy, who set New Jersey on a path to building a 100% zero-emissions power grid by 2035 but ultimately failed to generate any new offshore wind power. New Jersey voted on Tuesday for a candidate who aims to keep the stateâs climate ambitions alive. The long-held vision of offshore wind turbines being central to these goals endures â for now.
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