Data Name (This will be the displayed title in Catalog)
Community Port Landings and Revenue from Wind Energy Areas (WEAs)
Indicator Name (as exists in ecodata)
wind_port
Family (Which group is this indicator associated with?)
[ ] Oceanographic
[ ] Habitat
[ ] Lower trophic levels
[ ] Megafauna
[X] Social
[X] Economic
Data Description
NA
Introduction to Indicator (Please explain your indicator)
NA
Key Results and Visualization
This figure links historic port revenue (2008-2022) from within all wind energy areas (including all lease areas, the Central Atlantic proposed lease areas A-2, B-1 and C-1, GOM Draft Wind Energy Area and secondary areas), as a proportion of a port’s total fisheries revenue based on vessel trip reports as described in the revenue and landings of species in the wind indicator above. The range (minimum and maximum) of total percent fisheries revenue from within wind energy areas is presented in the graph and ports are sorted from greatest to least fisheries revenue from within wind areas. Those communities that score Med-High or higher in at least one of the vulnerability indicators that address environmental justice concerns (i.e., Poverty, Population Composition, Personal Disruption; see indicator definitions) are noted with a triangle. Gentrification pressure is also highlighted here, with those communities that score Med-High or higher in one or more gentrification pressure indicators (i.e., Housing Disruption, Retiree Migration, Urban Sprawl) represented with a circle.
Implications
BOEM reports that cumulative offshore wind development (if all proposed projects are developed) could have moderate impacts on low-income members of environmental justice communities who work in the commercial fishing and for-hire fishing industry due to disruptions to fish populations, restrictions on navigation and increased vessel traffic as well as existing vulnerabilities of low-income workers to economic impacts @boem_vineyard_2020. impacts of offshore wind development may unevenly affect individual operators, with permit-based revenue being much higher than the port-based mean for some permit holders
Spatial Scale
Full Shelf, broken down into Mid-Atlantic and New England communities
Primary Contact
angela.silva@noaa.gov
Secondary Contact
No response
Data Name (This will be the displayed title in Catalog)
Community Port Landings and Revenue from Wind Energy Areas (WEAs)
Indicator Name (as exists in ecodata)
wind_port
Family (Which group is this indicator associated with?)
Data Description
NA
Introduction to Indicator (Please explain your indicator)
NA
Key Results and Visualization
This figure links historic port revenue (2008-2022) from within all wind energy areas (including all lease areas, the Central Atlantic proposed lease areas A-2, B-1 and C-1, GOM Draft Wind Energy Area and secondary areas), as a proportion of a port’s total fisheries revenue based on vessel trip reports as described in the revenue and landings of species in the wind indicator above. The range (minimum and maximum) of total percent fisheries revenue from within wind energy areas is presented in the graph and ports are sorted from greatest to least fisheries revenue from within wind areas. Those communities that score Med-High or higher in at least one of the vulnerability indicators that address environmental justice concerns (i.e., Poverty, Population Composition, Personal Disruption; see indicator definitions) are noted with a triangle. Gentrification pressure is also highlighted here, with those communities that score Med-High or higher in one or more gentrification pressure indicators (i.e., Housing Disruption, Retiree Migration, Urban Sprawl) represented with a circle.
Implications
BOEM reports that cumulative offshore wind development (if all proposed projects are developed) could have moderate impacts on low-income members of environmental justice communities who work in the commercial fishing and for-hire fishing industry due to disruptions to fish populations, restrictions on navigation and increased vessel traffic as well as existing vulnerabilities of low-income workers to economic impacts @boem_vineyard_2020. impacts of offshore wind development may unevenly affect individual operators, with permit-based revenue being much higher than the port-based mean for some permit holders
Spatial Scale
Full Shelf, broken down into Mid-Atlantic and New England communities
Temporal Scale
2008-2022
Synthesis Theme
Define Variables
NA
Indicator Category
If other, please specify indicator category
No response
Data Contributors
Angela Silva, Doug Christel
Point(s) of Contact
Angela Silva (angela.silva@noaa.gov)
Affiliation
?
Public Availability
Source data are publicly available.
Accessibility and Constraints
No response