Revolution Wind | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Location | WEA OCS-A 0486 Outer Continental Shelf Offshore Rhode Island [1] |
Coordinates | 41°09′00″N71°04′12″W / 41.149972°N 71.069972°W [2] [3] |
Status | Under Construction |
Construction began | 2023 [4] |
Commission date | (2026) [4] |
Owner | Ørsted US Offshore Wind Global Infrastructure Partners |
Wind farm | |
Type | Offshore |
Distance from shore | 15 miles (24 km) |
Rotor diameter | 660 feet (200 m) |
Power generation | |
Nameplate capacity | 704 MW [5] |
External links | |
Website | https://revolution-wind.com/about-revolution-wind |
Revolution Wind is a utility-scale offshore wind farm under construction on the Outer Continental Shelf Offshore Rhode Island that will provide a total of 704 MW of power, 400 MW to Rhode Island and 304 MW to Connecticut. It is set to be completed in 2026. [6] [7]
The wind farm will consist of 65 Siemens Gamesa 11.0-200 DD turbines each providing 11 MW. [8] It is located approximately 18 miles southeast of Point Judith on the Rhode Island mainland and 15 miles east of Block Island where the Block Island Wind Farm is located. It will create enough energy to power 350,000 homes. [6] [9] The onshore transmission substation is being built at Quonset Point in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, [10] which is also the operations center for the project. [11] The offshore wind port at the Connecticut Port Authority's New London pier is used for marshalling and assembly.
In 2013, the lease area for Revolution Wind and South Fork Wind was sold to Deepwater Wind. The lease was later split into two different areas with Revolution Wind remaining in area OCS-A 0486. Deepwater Wind has since been acquired by Orsted and become Orsted US Offshore Wind. [12] The project was originally a joint venture with Eversource, however, their share of the project was sold to Global Infrastructure Partners on September 30, 2024. [13]
Rhode Island state regulators approved the project in 2019. [14] On November 17, 2023 the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management(BOEM) approved the final construction and operations plan. [15]
The first foundation was laid in May 2024 [16] [17] and the first turbine was installed on September 3, 2024. [18]
Ørsted A/S is a Danish multinational energy company. Headquartered in Fredericia, Denmark, Ørsted is the largest energy company in Denmark. The company adopted its current name on 6 November 2017. It was previously known as DONG.
Wind power in California had initiative and early development during Governor Jerry Brown's first two terms in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The state's wind power capacity has grown by nearly 350% since 2001, when it was less than 1,700 MW. In 2016, wind energy supplied about 6.9% of California's total electricity needs, or enough to power more than 1.3 million households. Most of California's wind generation is found in the Tehachapi area of Kern County, California, with some large projects in Solano, Contra Costa and Riverside counties as well. California is among the states with the largest amount of installed wind power capacity. In recent years, California has lagged behind other states when it comes to the installation of wind power. It was ranked 4th overall for wind power electrical generation at the end of 2016 behind Texas, Iowa, and Oklahoma. As of 2019, California had 5,973 megawatts (MW) of wind power generating capacity installed.
New York has 2,192 MW of installed wind power capacity as of 2022. Most of New York's wind power is located in upstate New York as onshore wind farms. New York has set a goal of developing 9,000 MW of offshore installed wind power capacity by 2035 that will power an estimated 6 million homes. As of October 2022, New York has five offshore wind farms in development with approximately 4,300 MW installed capacity.
Ørsted U.S. Offshore Wind is an offshore wind energy development group that is affiliated with Ørsted, a Danish firm. It is joint headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island. As of 2019, it was involved in some of the largest offshore wind farm projects in the United States.
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Gertrude M. "Trudy" Coxe is an American non-profit executive and CEO of the Preservation Society of Newport County, formerly the Secretary of Environmental Affairs in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. She has advocated against the construction of offshore wind farms in Rhode Island, arguing that they cause "unnecessary loss to our community's irreplaceable character and sense of place."
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Block Island Wind Farm is the first commercial offshore wind farm in the United States, located 3.8 mi (6.1 km) from Block Island, Rhode Island in the Atlantic Ocean. The five-turbine, 30 MW project was developed by Deepwater Wind, now known as Ørsted US Offshore Wind.
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Ocean Wind was a proposed utility-scale 2,248 MW offshore wind farm to be located on the Outer Continental Shelf approximately 15 miles (24 km) off the coast of Atlantic City, New Jersey. It was being developed by Ørsted US Offshore Wind in conjunction with Public Service Enterprise Group (PSE&G). Construction and commissioning were planned for the mid-2020s. The closed Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station and B.L. England Generating Station would provide transmission points for energy generated by the wind farm.
US Wind is an offshore wind energy development company founded in 2011. US Wind is owned by funds managed by Apollo Global Management, an American investment firm, and Renexia SpA, a subsidiary of Toto Holding SpA. It is headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. Since 2014, it has been involved in offshore wind farm projects in the United States.
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