RODA petitions US Supreme Court to review its case against Vineyard Wind

An exterior view of the U.S. Supreme Court building in winter
The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance is petitioning the Supreme Court of the United States to review a ruling on its case against Vineyard Wind | Photo courtesy of Orhan Cam/Shutterstock
6 Min

The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance (RODA) has appealed its case against the Vineyard Wind offshore wind project to the Supreme Court of the United States.

RODA, a lobbying group representing commercial fishermen, first filed a lawsuit against in 2022 in objection to federal approvals of the wind energy project. The 800-megawatt project, located in an area off the coast of the U.S. state of Massachusetts, is planned to take up as much as 75,000 acres. 

That initial lawsuit was dismissed in October 2023 after the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts determined RODA didn’t have the standing to sue the agencies – a ruling that was later upheld by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Now, RODA said it has filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which asks the U.S. Supreme Court to review the ruling of a lower court. The organization argues that the Secretary of Interior did not do enough to consider the needs of the commercial fishing industry when approving the Vineyard Wind 1 project.

RODA claims under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, the Secretary of Interior “shall ensure” any approved activities are consistent with a legal requirement to prevent interference with reasonable uses, such as “use of the sea or a seabed for a fishery.” RODA said in approving Vineyard Wind, the department merely considered the factors to balance them, a reinterpretation that ignores the potential harm wind projects can have for fishing. 

Throughout the approval process of the project, RODA has repeatedly claimed project organizers and government officials alike have ignored its advice and the objections of commercial fishermen. As early as 2019, commercial fishermen said the wind project operators told them the impacts of the turbines on fishing would be sorted out after they were already built.

“How does offshore wind energy affect the fishing industry?” Captain Ed Yates of Barnegat Light, New Jersey, told the Associated Press in 2019. “The answer we get from the wind operators is, ‘We won’t fully understand the impacts until the facilities are already built.’”

In 2023, the entire Rhode Island Fishermen’s Advisory Board (FAB) resigned, also claiming the government was effectively ignoring any concerns out of commitment to the wind project regardless of impact or input from fishermen.

“It has become abundantly clear that the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council [CRMC] has made deference to offshore wind developers its top priority regardless of the requirements of the Ocean [Special Area Management Plan], the cost to the environment, or the impacts to Rhode Island’s fishing industry,” the board members wrote. “FAB members have collectively invested and sacrificed thousands of hours of our own time and our own expenses and have provided CRMC with expertise, data, science, research, and experience. But, we will no longer waste our time.”  

RODA has long argued that getting Vineyard Wind right is ...


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