Block Island Wind Farm

Block Island Wind Farm
Country United States
Location New Shoreham, Rhode Island
Coordinates 41°06′52.96″N 71°31′16.18″W / 41.1147111°N 71.5211611°W / 41.1147111; -71.5211611Coordinates: 41°06′52.96″N 71°31′16.18″W / 41.1147111°N 71.5211611°W / 41.1147111; -71.5211611
Construction began 2015
Commission date 2016 (projected)
Construction cost $290 million
Owner(s) Deepwater Wind
Wind farm
Type offshore
Avg. site elevation 0
Power generation
Units operational 5 (planned)
Nameplate capacity 30-MW
Website
http://www.4coffshore.com/windfarms/block-island-wind-farm-united-states-us12.html

Block Island Wind Farm, construction of which began in 2015, is expected to be the first commercial offshore wind farm in the United States.[1] It is located 3.8 miles (6.1 km) from Block Island, Rhode Island in the Atlantic Ocean. The five-turbine, 30-MW project is being developed by Deepwater Wind which plans to erect the Alstom Haliade 150 6-MW turbines in late summer 2016 and launch commercial operations in the fourth quarter of 2016.[2] It will be the largest project using wind power in Rhode Island.

Design and capacity

A project of Deepwater Wind,[3] Block Island Wind Farm will be located about 3.3 nautical miles southeast of Block Island, becoming the first offshore wind farm in the United States.[4] The thirty-megawatt five-turbine demonstration project is expected to produce more than 125,000 megawatt hours annually. Power will be transmitted from the turbines to the electric grid along a 21 miles (34 km) transmission submarine power cable buried under the ocean floor, making landfall north of Scarborough Beach in Narragansett. The structures, designed by Alstom Wind, will stand 600 ft (180 m) high and can withstand a Category 3 storm.[5][6][7] The system will connect New Shoreham to the grid for the first time and allow it to cease using diesel generators and be replaced with power from the cable supplying the island.[8] Gulf Island Fabrication was interested in building the foundations.[9]

Permits and funding

The Block Island Wind Farm was conceived as a larger project extending into neighboring Massachusetts[10] to build a $1.5-billion, 385-megawatt wind farm in federal waters. The 100-turbine project could provide 1.3 terawatt-hours (TW·h) of electricity per year – 15 percent of all electricity used in the state.[11] In 2009, the State of Rhode Island designated Deepwater Wind to begin with pilot projects.[12][13] In that year Deepwater signed an agreement with National Grid to sell the power from the wind farm off Block Island, at an initial price of 24.4¢/kW·h.[14]

The permitting process for the project has been highly controversial, with the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission (RIPUC) initially rejecting the agreement price with National Grid as being excessive to Rhode Island's electricity rate payers.[15] However, after the Rhode Island General Assembly and Governor Carcieri changed the state law concerning the "commercial reasonability" of contract pricing, the RIPUC voted to approve the key contract.[16] After continuing controversy and appeals, the Rhode Island Supreme Court ruled in July 2011 to uphold the RIPUC decision. Opponents of the project raised issue about the contract pricing with the United States Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in August 2012, but FERC in October of the same year issued a decision that they would not act on the complaint.[17] A total of nine reviews and permits from state federal agencies were acquired, the last in early May 2015.[18] On May 11, 2015 a new complaint was filed with FERC alleging that the power purchase agreement with National Grid violates the Public Utilities Regulatory Policy Act of 1978 and further alleging that the RIPUC violated the Federal Power Act and the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution. However, Deepwater Wind maintains that there is no support for any of these claims and that FERC should promptly deny the new complaint in its entirety.[17]

While the wind turbines will be built in state waters southeast of Block Island, the transmission cable will cross federal waters in the Atlantic. A portion of the power would be supplied directly to Block Island which is 13 miles (21 km) off shore from the Rhode Island mainland and has some of the highest power rates in the country due to its local generation by small diesel powered generators.[19][20][21]

Deepwater Wind announced March 2015 that it had received funding in the amount of $290 million from mandated lead arrangers Société Générale of Paris, France and KeyBank National Association of Cleveland, Ohio,[22]

Construction

In late 2014, Gulf Island Fabrication, Inc.[23] began steel work construction at its Houma, Louisiana shipyard. The building phase would focus on the turbines' foundations (for platforms) to be pile-anchored to the ocean floor. On June 26, 2015, the first of the five foundations for the project began its move via barge from Louisiana.[24] The turbines will be delivered later in 2015 and erected in place in 2016.[25] Foundation assembly started in ProvPort in March 2016, with estimated commissioning in late 2016.[26]

On March 9, 2015, French company Alstom Group received final notication to begin fabrication of five Alstom Haliade 150 6-MW offshore wind turbines. GE Wind (offshore) acquired Haliade production in November 2015.[27]

As of July 2016, the site was grid-connected,[28][29] and towers and LM Wind Power blades[30] were in the port of Providence. The Norwegian installation jack-up vessel[31] was on its way to France to pick up the 400 tonne generators.[32] A test version of the direct-drive[33] turbine is installed at Østerild Wind Turbine Test Field.[34]

The first turbine was erected in August 2016.[35][36][37] On August 18, 2016, Deepwater Wind CEO Jeffrey Grybowski announced Block Island Wind Farm was fully constructed.[38][39]

See also

References

  1. "Offshore Wind Farm Raises Hopes of U.S. Clean Energy Backers". The New York Times. 24 July 2015.
  2. "Alstom announces a major milestone for Deepwater's Block Island Offshore Wind Project". alstom.com.
  3. "Rhode Island Chooses Deepwater Wind to Build Off-Shore Wind Farm". renewableenergyworld.com.
  4. "First Offshore Wind Farm In The U.S. Kicks Off Construction". ThinkProgress. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  5. "Clean energy is just over the horizon.". Deepwater Wind. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  6. "Block Island Wind Farm". Deepwater Wind. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  7. Alex Kuffner. "Deepwater Wind completes financing for Block Island wind farm". providencejournal.com. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  8. "The Day - Wind farm controversy buffets tiny Block Island - News from southeastern Connecticut". The Day.
  9. Kuffner, Alex. "Louisiana builder is hard at work on R.I.'s offshore wind turbines + Video".
  10. "4 potential wind farm sites south of Martha's Vineyard due to be auctioned". masslive.com.
  11. Lord, Peter B. (April 24, 2009). "Deepwater wind project making headway". The Providence Journal. Retrieved April 29, 2009.
  12. "Rhode Island Chooses Deepwater Wind to Build Off-Shore Wind Farm". RenewableEnergyWorld.com. September 30, 2008. Retrieved April 29, 2009.
  13. Nesi, Ted (April 22, 2009). "U.S. offshore wind rules expected today". Providence Business News. Retrieved April 29, 2009.
  14. Turkel, Tux (January 3, 2010). "Offshore wind power: Can Maine afford it?". Portland Press Herald.
  15. Chris Barrett and Ted Nesi (30 March 2010). "PUC Rejects Deepwater Contract on Price". Providence Business News. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  16. Chris Barrett (11 August 2010). "PUC Approves Deepwater Wind-National Grid Power Deal, But Appeals Expected". Providence Business News. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  17. 1 2 Barry Cassell (11 May 2015). "Deepwater Wind defends power sale deal at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission". TransmissionHub. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  18. Alex Kuffner. "Block Island offshore wind farm receives another key approval". providencejournal.com.
  19. "State of Rhode Island: Office of Energy Resources". ri.gov.
  20. "First ROW grant for wind farm in federal waters". Federal Times.
  21. Lieberman, Ellen (March 2014). "Wind Resistance". Rhode Island Monthly. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  22. "First American Offshore Wind Farm Fully Funded". The Maritime Executive.
  23. "Gulf Island Fabrication wins foundation work for first U.S. offshore wind farm". NOLA.com.
  24. "First foundations now bound for Rhode Island". olivesoftware.com.
  25. Alex Kuffner. "First Deepwater Wind foundations on barge bound for R.I. + video". providencejournal.com.
  26. Mark Del Franco (22 March 2016). "Block Island Wind Farm Kicks Off 2016 Construction". Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  27. "Alstom closes sale of energy business to GE (UPDATE 1)", www.reuters.com, 2 November 2015
  28. "National Grid connects Block Island to land".
  29. "All Block Island Cables In Place". Offshore Wind. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  30. "Block Island's blades arrive in the US".
  31. http://www.4coffshore.com/windfarms/vessel-bold-tern-vid87.html
  32. "Installerer USAs første havvindpark: Det norske fartøyet vil ruve 40 meter høyere enn Frihetsgudinnen".
  33. http://www.4coffshore.com/windfarms/turbine-ge-energy-haliade-150-6mw-tid71.html
  34. http://www.4coffshore.com/windfarms/gws-starts-block-island-gig-nid4129.html
  35. "First Offshore US Wind Turbines Installed Off Rhode Island". Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  36. "Wind farm turbine installation begins". Block Island Times. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  37. Official video
  38. Twitter
  39. Adams, Rod (17 August 2016). "Is Offshore Wind Finally Ready To Serve U.S. Power Needs?". Forbes. Retrieved 19 August 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.