Episode 9: Kenneth Bowes – Long Island is a Gale Force

When the wind blows: Kenneth Bowes, Eversource Energy's vice president for offshore-wind siting and permitting, is knee-deep in the science of offshore-wind farming, with a unique view of Long Island's critical role in this burgeoning national industry.

Kenneth Bowes is no farmer – but he’s trying to grow Long Island’s all-time most-bountiful harvest.

Exciting socioeconomic winds are blowing across the nation, and nowhere do those forward-looking gales gust harder than Long Island, where offshore wind-generated electricity is foremost on the minds of private corporations, local governments, top universities and national laboratories, all jockeying for position in the clean-gen power play of the next century.

Among those surfing the winds: Eversource Energy, a New England-based utility (and Fortune 500 company) with about 4 million retail electricity, natural gas and water-service customers on land and some serious ambitions at sea. Partnering with Danish multinational power company Ørsted, Eversource is developing three offshore-wind farms in the Northeast, including two projects off the Montauk coast: South Fork Wind and Sunrise Wind, with commercial operations slated to begin in 2023 and 2024, respectively.

In today’s conversation, Kenneth Bowes – Eversource Energy’s vice president for offshore wind siting and permitting, an electrical engineer by trade – joins Spark host Gregory Zeller to discuss the heavy-duty science and major-league lobbying behind the growing U.S. offshore-wind industry, and Long Island’s critical role in that burgeoning national infrastructure.