Rhode Island, Massachusetts Set to Buy Power From 3 New Offshore Wind Farms

States choose SouthCoast Wind, New England 1 and Vineyard Wind 2

A scenic view of windmills near the lake in a sunset sky background
Wirestock
Share
A scenic view of windmills near the lake in a sunset sky background
Wirestock
Rhode Island, Massachusetts Set to Buy Power From 3 New Offshore Wind Farms
Copy

Officials in Rhode Island and Massachusetts on Friday announced they plan to buy power from three new offshore wind farms, signaling that energy regulators in both states still consider the renewable energy source economically viable in New England after an industry-wide contraction last year.

Private utility companies in both states will now negotiate contracts to purchase up to 2,878 megawatts of electricity from the selected wind projects. The electricity prices under those contracts will not be publicized until they are submitted to state regulators for approval later this year.

The announcement came as part of a joint procurement process involving Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut. The goal was to make it possible for southern New England to buy offshore wind power in bulk, making the electricity cheaper for each state.

But the lion’s share of the electric capacity announced in the procurement so far — 2,676 of the 2,876 megawatts — would ultimately flow to Massachusetts. Rhode Island committed to securing the remaining 200 megawatts, which amounts to only one-sixth of the target Rhode Island officials set last fall. Connecticut officials were not ready to announce any viable projects on Friday.

The three wind farms include SouthCoast Wind, formerly known as Mayflower Wind. Rhode Island plans to purchase its 200 megawatts from SouthCoast Wind. The other companies are New England 1, developed by Avangrid; and Vineyard Wind 2, developed by Vineyard Offshore.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Testifying before a House subcommittee, undergraduate Alex Shieh urged Congress to subpoena Brown University President Christina Paxson.
43-28 vote features opposition from all chamber Republicans, 17 Democrats, 1 independent
The Public’s Radio and Rhode Island PBS merged in May 2024 and now plan to unify under a new name this fall. The Public’s Radio political reporter Ian Donnis spoke about the name change with our CEO, Pam Johnston
Revised proposal would clear the smoke inside Bally’s Rhode Island casinos by 2027
End-of-session request comes as labor, education bills pile up for consideration