Gone with the offshore wind farms

August 19, 2025

OPINION by BOB SMITH

As I sat with my wife’s family for my birthday dinner this past weekend at Goleta Beach, everyone marveled at the view of the ocean from our table. I couldn’t help but say, “Now imagine it covered in hundreds of Eiffel tower-sized machines.”

The Central Coast not only borders the Pacific Ocean; it thrives beside it. From Point Mugu to Monterey Bay, our economy, culture, and identity are connected to it.

Along the way up the Central Coast, you hit Morro Bay with its unique feature, Morro Rock, a Chumash cultural site. Just offshore from Morro Bay, past the fishing boats, lies one of the richest marine ecosystems on Earth. Anchovies feed whales and seabirds. Kelp forests shelter rockfish and abalone. Cold upwelling waters drive a coastal food chain that has sustained life and livelihoods for thousands of years, since the first Chumash arrived.

This could all be threatened by a plan that favors foreign profits, California’s activist climate policies, and their supporting NGOs.

The federal government has leased 400 square miles of ocean off Morro Bay for an industrial-scale floating offshore wind (FLOW) farm of 300 turbines, each over 1,000 feet tall, with 350-foot blades. These turbines will be visible from shore. They will require massive industrial harbor upgrades, large anchoring systems, constant vessel traffic, extensive electric cable runs throughout the water, and permanent infrastructure in the bay.

To put this FLOW area into perspective, it is about the size of Los Angeles, located directly offshore in our ocean, with hundreds of miles of anchor chains and cables in the water.

Harnessing Offshore Wind

On paper, the 300-turbine project promises up to three gigawatts of nameplate capacity,
theoretically enough to power over 900,000 homes at peak production. But offshore wind operates at just 30–35% maximum efficiency, meaning Morro Bay would deliver closer to one gigawatt of average power, which is less than half of the output of the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant.

Advocates say this project will help California meet its goal of 100% clean energy by 2045 and reduce carbon emissions by up to five million metric tons per year, which is 1.4% of the state’s total emissions. It should be noted, though, that production, installation, ship support, and disposal bring this net carbon offset down to potentially three million metric tons or less per year, which is less than 0.83% of the state’s total emissions.

A common theme in California – importing energy

Not a single thoroughly American company will produce these turbines. The winning offshore lease bids went to three foreign or multinational corporations: Equinor Wind of Norway; Invenergy, a multinational backed by Blackstone; and Central California Offshore Wind, a Portuguese French joint venture. Every significant component, the turbines, cables, anchoring systems, substations, and installation ships, will be manufactured overseas. This is offshore in every sense of the word.

The risks

Offshore wind turbines are not passive pinwheels. They are industrial machines built with petroleum-based fiberglass that use hundreds of gallons of oil each, just for lubrication, and require constant upkeep in one of the harshest environments on Earth.

The service life for wind turbines at sea is short, 15 to 25 years at best, and their blades are non-recyclable, creating a huge landfill problem.

On July 13th, 2024, days after Vineyard Wind brought its tenth turbine online off Martha’s Vineyard, making it the largest offshore wind farm in the country, one of its blades snapped, scattering white and green fiberglass debris into the ocean. Fiberglass shards were found days later on Nantucket’s beach, which led to beach closures for cleanup efforts and lawsuits.

Let me repeat that…they got to ten before an environmental mishap. Now imagine three hundred of these machines just off Morro Bay.

These waters are home to whales, dolphins, sea lions, and countless seabirds. Offshore wind energy development could affect marine mammals in a variety of ways, including physical interactions with associated vessel traffic, entanglement, displacement from foraging or migratory habitat, and impacts related to port activities, while spinning blades pose lethal risks to birds, especially along migratory routes.

Even worse, anchoring hundreds of turbines offshore may disrupt coastal upwelling, the cold, nutrient-rich currents that fuel our entire marine food chain. No upwelling means fewer fish, dead kelp forests, and damaged ecosystems.

Areas around offshore wind farms on the East Coast have experienced a spike in marine mammal strandings since wind farm installation started. However, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Marine Mammal Stranding Center (MMSC) refute wind farms as the cause, but acknowledge they have only been able to perform autopsies on 40% of stranded whales in the areas. Areas with significantly smaller wind farms compared to what Morro Bay will have.

The largest FLOW farm operational in the world today consists of only eleven turbines completed in 2023, which provide the basis of current short-term studies of environmental impacts. So, of course, California is diving in headfirst with three hundred, happy to potentially destroy our ocean for less than 1% carbon offset.

We have seen marine science organizations, professors, and watchdogs protesting desalination plants, small-scale oil operations, and even surf contests for environmental harm. Yet now they ignore anchoring a Los Angeles-sized city of 1,000-foot turbines into marine sanctuaries. Why? Maybe “carbon offset” appeared on their research grant?

The political wind crusade

Congressman Salud Carbajal is leading the charge. He founded the congressional Offshore Wind Working Group. He called the lease sale “historic.” He claimed offshore wind would be an “economic powerhouse for the Central Coast.” And he’s pushed for expedited transmission approvals, without regard for the risks to our coastline, fisheries, or cultural heritage, particularly to the Chumash, who consider Morro Bay a sacred site, and have opposed the intrusion into ancestral waters.

While Representative Carbajal promotes foreign procured wind turbines, he has offered no serious effort to support or modernize Diablo Canyon. This facility already produces more clean energy than this entire offshore project will on its best day. Notably, Diablo Canyon is also the #1 private employer in San Luis Obispo County, creating American jobs.

A bipartisan truth

No matter what your politics, one thing should unite us all on the Central Coast: the ocean is our most valuable resource.

We do need balanced power solutions. That means renewables, yes, but in ways that complement, not compromise, our baseload energy and natural resources.

If a massive FLOW farm were a necessary sacrifice, that would be one thing. But this project offers little economic or climate benefit to us locally, with significant environmental risk. We need to be clear on this, as this is not an attack on renewables; it is advocacy for not harming our most valuable resource. A giant city-sized machinery farm in our ocean is different from solar panels on the roofs of buildings and houses across that same city-sized area.

When it comes to our ocean, our most valuable natural asset, we should demand an exceptionally high cost-benefit ratio for any large-scale industrial intrusion, especially one with no valid precedent anywhere in the world. The burden of proof must be higher, not lower, for projects that disrupt marine ecosystems.

The winds of change

Earlier this year, the President issued an executive order halting new offshore wind leases and requiring a federal review of existing projects, including Morro Bay. The leases aren’t dead yet, but they can be.

We need a congressperson who supports the administration in canceling these offshore leases and backs the administration’s new nuclear initiative by maintaining and upgrading Diablo Canyon, as well as finding sites for new modern nuclear plants, while continuing to support research on new energy technology, like fusion. There are many locations to install renewables in a balanced plan without taking such an enormous risk to our most valuable resource, while exporting the jobs to foreign bidders. This is common sense.

How do you learn more?

REACT Alliance is a nonpartisan community-led grassroots effort that has been opposing this offshore monstrosity in Morro Bay. They are fighting mega special interest-funded NGOs, and of course, the regular army of climate activist zealots and politicians that think a city-sized field of machinery in our ocean is worth 0.008% of world CO2 offset. Their info can be found at https://www.reactalliance.org/.

I strongly urge everyone along the Central Coast to look closely at the details of these massive floating offshore wind (FLOW) farms before our coastline is irresponsibly lined with industrial towers in the name of progress. Except for Montecito, of course, our politicians seem to avoid placing unwanted farms in Montecito. But Carpinteria? You will no doubt become the world’s safest marijuana AND wind farm beach!

Bob Smith is a retired Navy veteran and candidate for California’s 24th Congressional District. During his 26 years of active service, he participated in several combat tours supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF). He has held various leadership roles in Washington, D.C., with a focus on major defense acquisition programs. 

 


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Got my vote; Salud’s pandering to special interests has benefitted no one but himself and them. Let’s send Mr Smith to Washington instead.


CDR (Ret.) Smith has this E-8’s vote! We need someone other than that guy we have now.


Abother totally uninformed and ignorant anti-science opinion. I’ll say it again and again; anti-wind energy is PRO-OIL! Sanata Barabara knows all about inviting the oil industry onto their front door step. Disaster pending!


Oh, the irony — screaming “anti-wind is pro-oil” while ignoring that wind turbines are built, installed, and maintained with oil. From the diesel-powered ships and trucks, to the thousands of gallons of lubricating oil inside each turbine, to the rare earth mining done with heavy machinery running on — you guessed it — fossil fuels. You’re not breaking up with oil by backing wind, you’re just swiping right on a different profile. So before you accuse others of being anti-science, try learning how your favorite giant spinning lawn ornaments actually work


Indeed, the irony. Substitute nuclear power plants for wind turbines and your comment is equally valid.


Offshore wind farms in marine sanctuaries? That’s environmentalism with a plot twist. Like planting a “save the trees” billboard in the middle of a redwood grove.


You take turbines the size of skyscrapers, barge them out to sea, drill into delicate habitats, and call it green because the blades spin—occasionally. All while whales get disoriented, fish scatter, and the ecosystem learns to cope with its new roommate: industrial hum.


Meanwhile, nuclear stays put on a small patch of land, generating a torrent of clean, reliable energy—no weather dependency, no marine eviction notices, and no need to pave the ocean floor with good intentions.


So no, it’s not even close. One powers cities. The other powers feelings.


Facts


With all respect, I feel ‘Big Oil’ dosen’t factor here.. they have all the customers they can handle globally as well as locally. I don’t think ‘green energy is on their radar at all.

The wind and battery guys are just like most of the rest of the Big American Industries- they will advertise, bribe and weasel to get what they want for themselves, their shareholders and the private equity money that is undoubtedly part of the picture.

Just because you have noble intentions dosen’t mean these corporations or the players the have ‘influenced’ do too!


For the record I have an M.S. in Systems Engineering. Love science. Happy to debate the substance of the article.


Respectfully, the only ignorance here is your false equivalence argument.


Good job by Smith to choose a hot button issue that seems to be breaking against the offshore wind industry just as he gears up a run for Congress. On one hand, the loudest voices on this issue have been firm in their opposition, not so much because they are against offshore wind, but because they don’t want it off their coast. It seems many voters are listening. Nevertheless, in latest polling, upward of 70% of California adults, no matter where they live, favor the energy source.


I hope that Smith will continue to enlighten us on his positions on important issues. His website statements on those issues are boilerplate stuff at best with plenty of generic rhetoric which could be made by a Republican or Democrat. I wonder how he feels about tariffs or mass deportation of our agricultural work force or the militarization of our big cities? Those are the things that will decide the next election. I look forward to hearing more from him. He has his work cut out for him in a district that has been reliably Democratic for several years.


Adam, the disaster of CA’s power grid is a top issue. The push for 100% renewables is a pending disaster, especially when it’s so overzealous destroying our ocean becomes okay. The only major economy in the world that went this route is Germany, importing baseload natural gas from Russia until the Ukraine conflict. They are screwed now and burning coal again, they have the highest emissions and energy costs in Europe. CA is tens of thousands of battery cities and a thousand square miles in solar panels behind maintaining the grid on renewables. And we import most of our baseload – much of it natural gas.


If we can’t maintain continuous baseload at reasonable cost, all tech companies will be leaving the state. My company has already moved all data centers and AI GPU servers out of state. Austin is on track to be the new Silicon Valley in a few years.


I have articles on some of the other topics you mentioned. Links on the media page on my website:


https://bobsmithforcongress.com/media-news/


Also define “mass deportations.” The number across all 3 central coast counties (Ventura, SB, and SLO) combined is 620 detainees. Half of that from the marijuana farm criminal warrants. So stormtroopers targeting/taking thousands of hardworking people is just rhetoric. If your only crime is crossing the border illegally with no prior deportations, you aren’t on the radar. If you are at a marijuana farm that’s under a multi-year criminal investigation for trafficking and cartel ties, then you are at risk. If you were previously removed under Obama with a 10 year felony entry ban, you are at risk. If you are an awesome hardworking laborer at Home Depot, next to your buddy that has 5 DUIs and a missed court appearance warrant, you are at risk. SB 54 sanctuary causes much of the problem and lack of transparency. My OPED in the SB Independent or CA Globe explains that.


Thanks for the response. More Republican talking points. But good luck in your quest. You better hope another Democrat or an actual common sense Republican doesn’t also run because you probably won’t be around in November. Maybe move to Texas next.


Adam, I am a common-sense candidate. You are throwing around insults. You haven’t provided a single piece of actual, informative data. Why is it a Republican talking point to challenge the cost-benefit of putting an industrial complex in our ocean? I’m a balanced energy person. I have purchased a solar system that 100% covered our electrical use, it wasn’t cheap, and I’m not rich. I’m on my 2nd EV so far. My wife is also on her 2nd EV. That’s a significant number of years of EV and solar use. Do you have me beat?


Why are they talking points to give actual DHS and County Truth Act detainee facts?


My wife is also a Democrat with Mexican immigrant parents – I find it hard to believe she would stay married to this far-right crazy you are calling me.


Here’s the problem. You all have created a narrative of the world, and you now live in this narrative. Anyone who questions whether it makes sense is counter to your narrative or the team you are on.


I’m not an idealogue. I’m a big picture problem solver. I look at things like actual data, cost/benefit, and risk. This project is fraught with severe risk and offers minimal benefit. A benefit that can be achieved through many other, less risky means with a higher cost/benefit ratio.


I’m telling you from a senior systems engineer’s perspective, working directly for the CTO of a tech company with two locations and hundreds of employees in CA, and locations in six other states. CA ranks last in places we want or can afford to hire the right people, and where we want our high-energy-use equipment. You will hear that same hiring story from the federal government to all tech companies. I managed a large engineering department here in the federal government. The federal government struggles to hire quality engineers on a GS salary compared to other states, particularly for entry-level college talent.


Our company is not a political entity. I assure you it doesn’t care about political talking points. It cares that if we put AI GPU servers in the FL location, they are 1/3 the energy cost. CA’s current posture on our energy grid is broken. Cost of living is broken. Home ownership is broken. There are too many sources on this for actual data. If you can’t acknowledge this, you are the one on biased talking points.


If you come around to making a change for the better, I would love your vote. Otherwise, good luck with hoping the invisible status quo congressman becomes a problem solver. Thank you for the discussion.


That clown you are attempting to inform cannot be taught.


If we had a block option here, he’d be blocked into oblivion. A perfect place for that person.


If you move to Texas you can work to ruin their renewable energy sector as well. They are the nation’s leader in the stuff. Go figure?


Great timely article ! Thanks CCNews


I did the research , attended the REACT ALLIANCE meetings and listened to the experts …. This BAD IDEA is being sold by our elected California politicians and profit minded entities who entice our leaders and also some of our local politicians


I urge anyone on the fence who is still trying to figure this one out to do their own research to the realities and dangers of this very very BAD IDEA


I shall gladly share one ultra valuable link to read which may hopefully open more minds to understand the grave nature of this already failed proposal \ project


https://stopthesethings.com/2024/07/16/total-disaster-why-offshore-wind-power-is-so-costly-environmentally-destructive/


The Rizz knows his biz!


At last—someone cuts through the noise.


This piece on the proposed offshore wind farm off Morro Bay isn’t just good—it’s essential reading. While most of the debate has been swallowed by buzzwords and blind activism, the author lays out the facts with clarity, wit, and actual environmental concern.


Hundreds of 1,000-foot turbines, made overseas, anchored in a thriving marine ecosystem—all for a carbon offset so small it wouldn’t power the lights in Sacramento. Meanwhile, Diablo Canyon is already here, already clean, and already reliable.


We’re being told this is “green progress,” but it looks a lot more like industrial overreach with a PR campaign. The environmental risks are real. The benefits? Dubious at best.


This article says what too many are afraid to: real environmentalism means protecting ecosystems, not industrializing them in the name of optics.


Huge credit to the author for saying what needs to be said—and doing it with style. Read it, share it, and start asking real questions about what’s being sold to us as “clean.”


I agree that the science behind these offshore projects is slanted towards development, with no real return for the massive investment or the environmental destruction except for the massive profits that will be made by those involved directly with the project. And to be clear, the company that sits at the center of the nesting dolls of LLCs and such is an OIL COMPANY. We already know how much influence those guys have purchased from a fraction of the profits they have squeezed from the rest of us.


Perhaps we should be looking at highly successful projects like the solar installation on Carrizo Plains that has not only functioned remarkably well, but has also been an environmental success as well. I went to a colloquium on this subject that was held by several serious environmental science groups in our area. It was amazing how well the wildlife adjusted to the panels and built their lives around them, seamlessly going about their lives. So, why are we not using more solar?


I have a really hard time understanding how anyone, no matter what their politics, convinces themselves that a project that would destroy the nature of our coastline, a significant amount of our wildlife, and our very profitable tourist industry for no real environmental relief and nothing but a few overpaid jobs. Developing our solar systems would be an environmental plus that would also create plenty of employment. But it would make us less dependent on oil, so those guys wouldn’t like that one bit.


There are even several different ways to do wind that make a hell of a lot more sense. Much smaller, more attractive and infinitely more efficient wind designs that would not be placed offshore. Less centralized power would be a means of energy independence that oil companies, etc., and major power companies do not approve of, but guess what? It would be a lot better for the rest of us. Not to mention our environment.


Floating offshore wind (FLOW) farm off Morro Bay is the worst idea EVER IN THE HISTORY OF IDEAS.


From the mind of a Libocrat.


The consequences OMG, The construction and maintenance cost OMG, and finally The electric bill OMG. The only thing that is free is the wind and if you smell a con, yes that too.