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By Rebecca Karp and Ian Straughter

Ian speaking to conference with other panelists and presentation in background
Photo by Kevin Trimmer courtesy of American Clean Power. All rights reserved.

In the ever-evolving landscape of renewable energy, wind power stands at the forefront of sustainable solutions. Recent wind conferences, namely American Floating Offshore Wind Technical Summit and American Clean Power Association, have provided a platform to explore the critical facets of this burgeoning industry.


Here, we delve into the key takeaways illuminating the path forward in harnessing the full potential of wind energy:


1. Regional Collaboration: The Driving Force

At the AFLOAT conference, state leaders from Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts unveiled their shared commitment to wind development in the Gulf of Maine. The collaboration among these states is a powerful testament to the potential of regional cooperation in achieving sustainable energy goals. At the ACP conference, a groundbreaking announcement outlined a tri-state offshore wind procurement involving Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. This regional partnership underscores the importance of collaboration in moving the industry forward and harnessing the full potential of offshore wind projects.


2. Embracing Diversity and Inclusion

Diversity, equity, and inclusion have become foundational principles within the offshore wind industry. At both conferences, a resounding commitment to equal access and opportunity echoed through the sessions. Initiatives like NYSERDA's offshore wind workforce development website demonstrated how to provide accessible training programs and career pathways information within the industry. From designing safety equipment for all genders and body shapes to targeted education and recruitment efforts, the industry is taking inclusive approaches to heart. It's a clear sign that offshore wind aims to be a welcoming industry for all.


3. Advancing Research and Technology

The future of wind energy predominantly hinges on technological innovation, especially in floating technology. Various entities, from the US Department of Energy to state agencies and private organizations, are dedicating substantial resources to research and development (R&D). Notably, the University of Maine's pioneering research into floating technologies leads the way, showcasing our collective commitment to progress.


4. Ports: The Backbone of Offshore Wind

Our nation's ports are critical to the success of offshore wind projects. Investment is required to maintain their state of good repair and prepare them for their role in renewable energy operations. Whether it's readying marshaling ports or construction sites, ensuring that ports are fully equipped for renewable energy applications is a top priority. These ports will serve as the lifelines of the offshore wind industry.


5. The Power of Knowledge Sharing

Offshore wind remains a relatively unfamiliar concept to the broader public. Industry leaders must engage in an ongoing educational effort. At the conferences, it was clear that we share a deep and growing understanding of offshore wind within our industry. However, it's crucial to extend this knowledge beyond our professional circles. We must educate the public about the benefits and challenges of offshore wind and ensure a smooth transition to a more sustainable energy economy.


These conferences have reaffirmed the unwavering dedication of the wind industry to a sustainable future. A collaborative approach positions offshore wind as a dynamic force in the global transition to cleaner energy. The wind sector is poised to fulfill its promise as a leader in the renewable energy revolution by creating equal access to opportunity, advancing research, fortifying infrastructure, and engaging in extensive knowledge sharing.

By Emma Bonanno

Ensuring diverse communities are positioned to benefit from historic clean energy investments is central to the success of state and local economic development and social justice goals. At Karp Strategies, we believe that major clean energy projects can help grow economic opportunity for all through equitable and fair strategies for communities, sensitivity to historic inequities, and advancing a just transition in the clean energy economy.


One of the greatest opportunities to advance these goals is the creation of community benefits programs and investments. When co-designed with impacted communities and stakeholders, community benefits programs can channel funding, information, capacity-building programs, and technical assistance to organizations and individuals in a way that’s equitable and tailored to diverse needs. This helps ensure that local communities and people benefit from major investments.


What do we mean when we say community benefits?


Karp Strategies was founded on the basic principle that local stakeholders deserve full inclusion and autonomy in the decisions and investments that impact their communities—as well as equitable access to the benefits. This is especially crucial within communities that have been historically marginalized but are now experiencing new investments, including disadvantaged and environmental justice communities. Community benefits strategies are a way to ensure that these communities can partake in the benefits of clean energy investments, such as good jobs, supplier contracts, and funding for community priorities and programs.

When working with public, private, and community actors to develop holistic community benefits strategies, we keep several core principles at the forefront of our work:

  • Diverse representation. The first step of any community benefits process is to develop an understanding of the full landscape of actors with a demonstrated history and connection to the community. At Karp Strategies, we engage in a comprehensive stakeholder mapping process involving desktop research on organizations and community priorities, conversations and interviews, and attendance at community events and discussions. Representatives should come from many different groups, and it’s the responsibility of the entity making the investment to conduct deep outreach to understand who should have a seat at the table. Finally, assessing community needs is critical to ensure that, once at the table, diverse stakeholders have the necessary information, capacity, and resources to participate actively.

  • Upfront and ongoing inclusion. Engagement is a core component of developing successful community benefits strategies—from the initial steps as the process is being developed and working groups are formed, through negotiations on the final structure of programs and investments, to ongoing community input as these strategies are implemented. Our team has expertise in developing inclusive end-to-end engagement strategies that ensure meaningful participation in all stages.

  • Understanding impacts. Conducting an impact analysis is critical to understand how the intersecting challenges—both historical and current—influence the way the impacts of major projects and investments manifest across communities. We see this as a prerequisite to meeting communities where they are and coming to conversations and negotiations from a place of empathy and understanding in order to drive successful outcomes for all parties.

  • Centering equity. Environmental justice communities, disadvantaged communities, and those who have borne the burden of decades of pollution and environmental racism must be at the forefront of the transition to a clean energy economy—in terms of inclusion, impact, and benefits. As a firm, we lead with equity across all parts of our methodology, advancing work that builds capacity within organizations, communities, and economies.

  • Structured implementation. We focus on the long game when developing community investment and benefits strategies, incorporating accountability benchmarks, outlining the strategic dispersal of funds, and planning for the long lifetime of projects.

What do community benefits strategies look like in action?


The strategic development of community benefits programs and investments is one of Karp Strategies’ foundational practice areas. Since her time in graduate school at MIT through her current work with offshore wind developers, economic development agencies, city governments, real estate developers, and others, Founding Principal + CEO Rebecca Karp has written and spoken extensively on the importance of intentional community benefits agreements. Over the years, the Karp Strategies team has been proud to support work on many catalytic projects that bring this intention to their investments in diverse communities.


Two recent examples of our community benefits work are highlighted below—the development of Equinor Wind US’s Offshore Wind Ecosystem Fund and the Champlain Hudson Power Express (CHPE) Green Economy Fund.

Equinor Wind US: Offshore Wind Ecosystem Fund


Private and public sector investments in emerging industries like offshore wind offer once-in-a-generation economic opportunities for communities across the region—opportunities to prioritize sustainable growth alongside racial equity and climate justice.

In 2022, Karp Strategies worked with Equinor Wind US to design and begin implementing the company’s community benefits strategy, setting it up to deliver on the $47 million in community benefits and $25 million in environmental research commitments made to New York State. The product of the first stage of this work was the launch of the $5 million Offshore Wind Ecosystem Fund, designed to make targeted investments in historically marginalized and environmental justice areas and populations in New York City.

Karp Strategies facilitated the development of the investment strategy and governance for the Fund through monthly meetings of a dedicated committee, research and advisory on fund strategy and execution, and engagement with key stakeholders and subject matter experts. This work helped define the Fund’s priority issues and ensure maximum impact for local communities, particularly in the workforce, supply chain, and economic access and growth.

Champlain Hudson Power Express (CHPE): Green Economy Fund

Ensuring diverse communities are positioned to benefit from historic clean energy investments is central to the success of equitable state and local economic development goals. Karp Strategies works to build inclusive design and recruitment processes for programs and funds, bringing advocates, agencies, and professionals together at the table and driving outcomes that center on social justice and economic mobility.

Karp Strategies, along with sub-consultant Empowering Work Advising (EWA), is working on launching and administering the $40 million Champlain Hudson Power Express (CHPE) Green Economy Fund, designed to support disadvantaged communities, low-income individuals, and transitioning fossil fuel workers in accessing and building careers in New York State’s green economy. The Green Economy Fund will finance workforce development programs and organizations providing wrap-around services that support workers in these target communities to access good jobs in the green economy.

Strategically building a diverse and inclusive RFP process to identify these programs and organizations is central to increasing access to the benefits of the green economy transition—one of the Green Economy Fund’s core priorities. Karp Strategies employs a data-driven approach and leverages our expansive knowledge of New York stakeholders, state and local workforce development priorities, grant management, and the clean energy sector to support recruitment and broaden the pool of applicants. Applications for the first round of funding closed at the end of April, with additional rounds planned for the next several years.


Let us know how we can support you!

Karp Strategies' community benefits practice draws on our expertise in community economic development, large-scale renewable energy projects, and our dedication to a just transition in the energy economy. Our team has extensive experience across engagement, impact analysis, and strategy design, which we bring together to help our clients develop successful and equitable community benefits strategies that center the needs of diverse communities. Let us know how we can support your work!



Port infrastructure in the New York Harbor. Photo by David Henry.

Ports—when you hear this word, what comes to mind? Our guess is you’re thinking ‘Ships?’ or maybe ‘Cranes that look like giraffe skeletons, but made industrial?’. You may not be thinking about how important ports are to keeping our economy running.


But ports and maritime infrastructure form the backbone of the U.S. economy, keeping the flow of goods moving to meet our everyday needs. The nation’s 328 coastal and inland ports support almost 31 million jobs and 26% of the GDP, according to 2018 statistics from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). The pandemic highlighted just how much this infrastructure impacts our lives, as the delivery of everything from cars to bananas to clothes to medicine to food to computers was affected by supply chain strain at the ports.


In recent years, ports have adopted a new role as vital links in the emerging offshore wind industry. As more developers win offshore lease areas and move into staging and constructing wind farms, our outdated port infrastructure—and lack of available funding for capital upgrades—create major barriers to accommodating industry supply chains and project development. Most of the nation’s ports are at least a century old, and owners struggle to modernize existing infrastructure in order to keep pace with and accommodate today’s larger vessels. Decades of federal, state, and local disinvestment have likewise delayed repairs and maintenance, compounding the deterioration. Indeed, despite ports’ importance, a $12 billion funding gap existed (as of 2018) to fix waterside infrastructure over the next decade, with billions more needed for landside upgrades.


Ports will need to modernize to accommodate the larger vessels that transport major turbine components to offshore lease areas, as well as the larger cranes needed for component assembly and placement of ships. In short: crumbling wharf infrastructure will not only impede business as usual, but delay and hinder the offshore wind industry’s ability to deliver clean energy to millions.


In promising news, the Biden Administration’s 2021 passage of the Infrastructure and Jobs Act will invest $17 billion in port infrastructure. Additionally, the US Department of Transportation’s Maritime Administration released a funding opportunity in February 2023 that makes over $662 million of federal funding available for port infrastructure modernization.


While these injections of funding will be helpful, they are not enough. According to the ASCE’s 2021 Infrastructure Failure to Act Report, the projected gap between port infrastructure needs and available investment will reach more than $2.6 trillion by 2029 and more than $5.6 trillion by 2039. The report also states that an increased investment of $281 billion a year would eliminate the potential economic burden caused by port degradation, including job and GDP loss, which could exceed $10.3 trillion by 2039. This level of investment will be difficult to attain without additional interventions like state funding programs, incentivized private sector investment, and government prioritization of port infrastructure spending across federal, state, and local levels.

These ports and their accompanying maritime infrastructure have long been a staple of America’s economy. To leverage further opportunities for economic development with the advent of offshore wind in the US, ports need the appropriate federal funding to modernize and continue to grow our jobs and GDP.


Want to learn more about ports, offshore wind, and all things maritime?


The Karp Strategies team has a passion for and expertise about ports after our years of experience working on ports and with port authorities from New Jersey to Massachusetts to Maine. After her urban planning degree, CEO and Managing Principal Rebecca Karp worked at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) both in policy and operational roles. Mike Deveney, our Data Compliance and Contract Administrator, joined Karp Strategies in 2021 after over thirty years of experience in operations, maintenance, security, and administration with PANYNJ.


We’ll be talking about exactly these issues and experiences at the Waterfront Alliance’s Waterfront Conference on May 8 in New York City! Join Rebecca, Maki Onodera (Jacobs), Stephen Famularo (WSP), and Patricia Gaynor (MARAD) as they speak on the panel, “Addressing Decades of Deterioration: Deferred Wharf and Pier Maintenance.” The discussion will explore how the public and private sectors must rise to the challenge of revitalizing our port infrastructure to support the regional economy.


Register for the Waterfront Conference below to attend this panel or others on waterfronts and climate resilience.


Register here:


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