To subscribe or renew, visit
            
            
            
              March/April 201 2
            
            
              ■
            
            
              
                The Port of Baltimore
              
            
            
              
                [
              
            
            
              
                17
              
            
            
              
                ]
              
            
            
              
                Wind Power
              
            
            
              Whips Through
            
            
              Review
            
            
              A
            
            
              major step has been taken toward
            
            
              developing wind energy on the Outer
            
            
              Continental Shelf off the coasts of
            
            
              Maryland, Virginia, New Jersey and Delaware.
            
            
              Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, U.S.
            
            
              Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and
            
            
              Interior’s Director of the Bureau of Ocean
            
            
              Energy Management (BOEM) Tommy P.
            
            
              Beaudreau announced Feb. 2 at a press con-
            
            
              ference in Baltimore that the Department
            
            
              of the Interior’s renewable energy initiative,
            
            
              which includes offshore wind power, had
            
            
              cleared an important environmental review.
            
            
              BOEM’s National Environmental Policy Act
            
            
              (NEPA) assessment found that there would
            
            
              be no significant environmental and socio-
            
            
              economic impacts from issuing wind energy
            
            
              leases in designated Outer Continental Shelf
            
            
              (OCS) areas off the mid-Atlantic Coast.
            
            
              In February, BOEM also published “Calls
            
            
              for Information and Nominations for Maryland
            
            
              Improving
            
            
              
                Air Quality
              
            
            
              T
            
            
              he Maryland Port Administration (MPA) has provided
            
            
              funding support for the Mid-Atlantic Dray Truck
            
            
              Replacement Program, which helps short-haul dray
            
            
              truck owners and operators working at the Port of Baltimore
            
            
              replace older models with newer, cleaner-running trucks.
            
            
              Funded by a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection
            
            
              Agency (EPA), the program is administered by the Mid-
            
            
              Atlantic Regional Air Management Association (MARAMA)
            
            
              and the University of Maryland Environmental Finance Center.
            
            
              The program provides $20,000 per vehicle as an incentive.
            
            
              The applications are judged on a set of criteria, including
            
            
              the age of the truck and the number of trips it takes to and
            
            
              from the Port. The vehicles that are being replaced must be
            
            
              scrapped so that they will not remain in service elsewhere,
            
            
              and they must be replaced with trucks whose engines are no
            
            
              older than 2007 models.
            
            
              “The Port Administration is committed to the continuous
            
            
              improvement of air emissions at the Port of Baltimore,
            
            
              and the Dray Truck Replacement Program is an important
            
            
              continuation of our Clean Diesel Program of the last few
            
            
              years,” said MPA Deputy Executive Director M. Kathleen
            
            
              Broadwater. Interested trucking companies can find more
            
            
              information at
            
            
            
              2011 Environmental
            
            
              
                HONORS
              
            
            
              L
            
            
              ast year, the Maryland Port Administration (MPA) chalked up
            
            
              many successes related to its greening efforts at the Port of
            
            
              Baltimore.
            
            
              The MPA won an Environmental Achievement Award from
            
            
              the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for several of
            
            
              its environmental initiatives, including its Dredged Material
            
            
              Management Program, which reuses dredged material in
            
            
              innovative ways such as wetland restoration and island
            
            
              re-creation; the Clean Diesel Program, which installs cleaner-
            
            
              running engines in port equipment such as locomotives and
            
            
              harbor craft; and the Schoolyard Greening Program, which
            
            
              replaces pavement at schools with grass and trees.
            
            
              Community
            
            
              
                Cleanup
              
            
            
              Near Port
            
            
              A
            
            
              cleanup day was scheduled by the Baltimore Port
            
            
              Alliance Environmental Committee, in partnership with
            
            
              the nonprofit Turner Station Conservation Teams, on a
            
            
              tract of land along a tidal inlet between the new Sollers Point
            
            
              community center and the entrance to the Turners Station Park.
            
            
              The community would like to see the area, which is near
            
            
              Dundalk, re-landscaped, with a fitness path for walkers.
            
            
              The cleanup was scheduled for April 21.
            
            
              established for terminals, there
            
            
              is a list of best management
            
            
              practices approved by the
            
            
              Maryland Department of
            
            
              the Environment and the
            
            
              Environmental Protection
            
            
              Agency, and that list is what
            
            
              we’ll use to improve the
            
            
              terminals,” Richardson said.
            
            
              The MPA’s marine
            
            
              terminals total some 4,000
            
            
              acres, about 90 percent
            
            
              of which are covered with
            
            
              impervious surfaces. But the
            
            
              pollution load at the terminals
            
            
              is less than half of one percent
            
            
              of the bay’s total TMDL load.
            
            
              “We are a minor role, but
            
            
              we take our part seriously,”
            
            
              McMahon said.
            
            
              Richardson added, “We
            
            
              abut the water and we have
            
            
              an obligation to be a good
            
            
              steward of the Chesapeake
            
            
              Bay.”
            
            
              
                Gov. Martin O’Malley, left, was joined by
              
            
            
              
                U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar during
              
            
            
              
                February’s wind-energy press conference.
              
            
            
              BILL MCALLEN
            
            
              and Virginia” to solicit lease nominations from
            
            
              industry and request public comments regard-
            
            
              ing site conditions, resources and multiple uses
            
            
              of the Wind Energy Areas. These leases would
            
            
              allow for the construction of giant windmills in
            
            
              the water.