The First Big Offshore Wind Power Project in the U.S.

The Vineyard Wind project will involve 84 turbines and 800 megawatts of capacity in the Atlantic Ocean—but market competition with China looms.

Reader Contribution by Ted Flanagan
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Photo by Thomas G.

Yes, it’s America’s first utility-scale wind farm, approved in June 2021 with construction underway. The Vineyard Wind project will involve 84 turbines in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 12 miles off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard. The farm will have a capacity of 800 megawatts, then its power will travel via cables buried 6 feet below the ocean floor to Cape Cod. Vineyard Wind expects to deliver power by 2023.

This is a big step. Right now, there are only two offshore wind farms in the United States. They produce a rather paltry 42 megawatts. The Block Island Wind Farm is situated 3.8 miles southeast of Block Island in Rhode Island. The 30-megawatt, five-turbine farm began commercial operation in 2016. The 12-megawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project is 27 miles offshore in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia. It is the first utility-owned wind farm (Dominion Energy), and the first to be built in federal waters.

What About Other Offshore Wind Projects?

There are also a dozen other offshore wind projects under federal review. The U.S. Interior Department has estimated that by the end of the decade, there could be 2,000 turbines along the East Coast from Massachusetts to North Carolina. The Biden Administration has pledged to build 30,000 megawatts of offshore wind in the United States by 2030. Efforts will include fast-tracking for permits and $3 billion in loan guarantees for offshore wind projects and investments in upgrades to ports to support wind-turbine construction.

Offshore wind is not without challenges: There is opposition from commercial fishing groups and coastal landowners; there are concerns about the effects on marine life. One commercial fishing group, the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, worries that its members’ boats and trawlers will have difficulty navigating around the turbines. And this, they say, could affect the catch.

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