Inslee lauds wind-energy jobs during visit to Port of Vancouver
The port has positioned itself as a major import destination for wind-energy components, bringing in components for more than 2,700 wind turbines last year, which contributed to a record-breaking financial year despite the hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The year 2020 was a remarkable year for the port in terms of moving wind energy, and we are thrilled to showcase the port’s capabilities to Governor Inslee,” Port CEO Julianna Marler said in a statement. “We look forward to continuing to work with our partners, customers and [the International Longshore and Warehouse Union] to keep cargo moving across port docks and bring economic activity to our region.”
The port enjoys several advantages in the competition for wind-energy imports, including an inland location along the Columbia River, large spaces to store the blades while they’re trucked out one by one, and relatively straightforward and unobstructed access to the freeway system, allowing the oversize components to be hauled through the Columbia River Gorge.
Inslee went on a 15-minute walking tour past several rows of stacked 74-meter (81.4 yard) turbine blades, accompanied by Marler, Port Commissioner Eric LaBrant and Cager Clabaugh, president of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 4.
The group also stopped to chat with mechanics next to the port’s two Liebherr mobile cranes, which are used in tandem to lift the blades off ships and onto truck beds one at a time.
The turbines were manufactured by Vestas and were part of a total shipment of 123 blades and 41 tower bases, according to a news release from the port. The tower bases have arrived, along with 69 of the blades, with an additional 54 scheduled for delivery on subsequent vessels.
At a news conference after the tour, Inslee touted the skilled jobs involved in transporting and installing wind energy components and stressed the importance of wind energy and other renewable sources as a means to combat climate change.
“These jobs are going to continue to grow, and I like the fact that our kids and our grandkids are going to have a future of employment in these burgeoning industries,” he said.
He briefly mentioned the ongoing effort to replace the Interstate 5 Bridge, and said the new bridge would help move large components like the blades along the I-5 corridor.
In response to a question about last week’s announcement of the cancellation of a proposed methanol plant at the Port of Kalama, Inslee said that the decision was made by the state Department of Ecology and was based on an assessment that the plant’s emissions would have been too high to satisfy Washington state law.
Anthony Macuk