New England States Postpone Awarding Offshore Wind Contracts

Rhode Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts were originally going to reveal the winning bid on Aug. 8.

Workers taking a break at a fish processing company in New Bedford have a view of an offshore wind terminal, including a turbine blade.
Workers taking a break at a fish processing company in New Bedford have a view of an offshore wind terminal, including a turbine blade.
Jennette Barnes/CAI
Share
Workers taking a break at a fish processing company in New Bedford have a view of an offshore wind terminal, including a turbine blade.
Workers taking a break at a fish processing company in New Bedford have a view of an offshore wind terminal, including a turbine blade.
Jennette Barnes/CAI
New England States Postpone Awarding Offshore Wind Contracts
Copy

Officials in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut postponed naming winners of regional offshore wind contracts on Aug. 8.

Massachusetts officials said they are delaying the decision for one month to consider the effect of a recent federal grant made to New England states.

The grant will fund regional, on-shore transmission infrastructure for offshore wind.

The three states want to buy up to 6,800 megawatts of power combined. That is more than eight times the size of Vineyard Wind.

Susan Muller, an energy analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists, said buying that much wind power will help New England during cold snaps when the energy grid is strained.

“We have been paying enormous amounts of money to import oil and gas, just to keep the grid secure and to make sure we don’t have a blackout in winter,” she said.

Wind off New England shores, she said, is “like a clutch player in the winter. It shows up almost exactly in sync with periods where we have very low temperatures.”

Muller is urging the states to “go big” by buying as much wind power as possible.

“We have been paying enormous amounts of money to import oil and gas, just to keep the grid secure and to make sure we don’t have a blackout in winter.”
Susan Muller, energy analyst

Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut cooperated to solicit bids from developers.

Massachusetts and Rhode Island had publicly scheduled their announcements for Aug. 8; Connecticut gave no specific date, saying only that it planned to name winners sometime in the third quarter.

Three companies have submitted bids: Avangrid, Ocean Winds, and Vineyard Offshore. A fourth company, Orsted, bid only in Rhode Island and Connecticut.

In some cases, the limited liability company submitting the application bears a different name from the parent company. SouthCoast Wind Energy LLC applied on behalf of Ocean Winds; Bay State Wind LLC applied on behalf of Orsted.

The winning projects will be built in the designated offshore wind area south of Rhode Island and Massachusetts.

This story was originally published by CAI. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

A stunning season by the New England Patriots and the rise of Drake Maye under Mike Vrabel, historic college runs and hometown stars staying put, New England sports are delivering an unexpected—and welcome—January gift
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee released his budget proposal. Now the General Assembly will spend months reviewing the plan
Written before COVID but hitting close to home, the comedy by Jonathan Spector skewers groupthink, social justice jargon and the limits of consensus
Counterclaim comes after three years and a trio of lawsuits by North Kingstown country club over shoreline dispute
From a sharp school-board satire at The Gamm to Black storytelling, chamber music and medieval fencing, here’s what’s happening this weekend and beyond in Rhode Island
In the aftermath of the deadly shooting at Brown University, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley reflected on what the city did right following the tragedy and what it can do better in the event of future emergencies