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National Grid, Ørsted Mobilizing Teams to Begin Block Island Wind Farm Cable Repairs This Fall

Oct 02, 2020 - 11:00 AM

Categories:

Rhode Island

Clean Energy

Renewable Energy

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (October 2, 2020) -- National Grid and Ørsted announced today they have begun mobilizing teams that will work throughout this fall and winter to replace limited segments of the Block Island Wind Farm and sea2shore transmission cables to achieve greater burial depths beneath the ocean floor. The effort includes replacing approximately 1,700 feet of National Grid’s sea2shore submarine cable that carries electricity between Block Island and mainland Rhode Island, and approximately 3,100 feet of Ørsted’s submarine cable that carries electricity from the Block Island Wind Farm to Block Island.

 

The submarine cables were installed in the spring/summer of 2016 and subsequently experienced challenges with sediment coverage over the cables.  After extensive due diligence, teams from Ørsted and National Grid determined the best approach to maintain the required burial depths of the two transmission cables is to reinstall these limited segments of the cables with new sections adjacent to where the existing cables now sit.

 

In the next few weeks, teams for both National Grid and Ørsted will begin staging equipment and barges that will be used for their work. The cable landings will be constructed using a horizontal directional drill (HDD), a common procedure for submarine cables such as these, and a conduit will be installed for the new length of onshore cable, including a new access pit. The drilling phase of the construction work at Town Beach is scheduled to begin this Fall, with the ocean-based cable installation scheduled to begin in early spring.   

 

The HDD will bury the cables at a depth of between 25 to 50 feet below the seafloor, as compared with the current 4 to 6 feet. This is deep enough to withstand changing ocean floor conditions and provide a continued reliable interconnection for Block Island and the Block Island Wind Farm for years to come.  The new cables will be spliced onto the existing cable that connects the Island, the wind project, and the mainland.  The existing portions of the exposed cables are scheduled to be removed at the end of construction.

 

Construction-related activities will be ongoing throughout the fall and winter, with an anticipated completion date before Memorial Day 2021.

 

Block Island and Rhode Island will continue to receive electricity from the wind farm during the construction, except for a brief outage in the spring, when the new cable will be spliced with the existing cable. During the National Grid cable and Block Island, Wind Farm outage, Block Island Power Company (BIPCo) will provide the needed electrical power to the Island utilizing its on-island diesel generation.

 

“We’re confident in the solution we’ve developed to ensure the Block Island Wind Farm transmission cable remains buried deeply below the ocean floor,” said Mikkel Mæhlisen, Head of Operations, Ørsted North America, Offshore. “We’re working closely with the Town of New Shoreham to ensure that all of our work is completed in the offseason, with as little impact to Town Beach visitors and as minimal interruption to the energy supplied from the wind farm as possible. We are grateful to town and state leaders for their close collaboration on this important work.”

 

“As the first offshore wind farm in the nation, the Block Island Wind Farm remains an enormous source of pride for all of Rhode Island,” said Terry Sobolewski, President of National Grid Rhode Island. “Both National Grid and Ørsted have been working rigorously with the town and state and federal partners on an enduring plan to address burial depth, and even amidst the pandemic, we are on track to having it completed in time for next summer.”  

 

National Grid and Ørsted have worked in close collaboration with the Town of New Shoreham, the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council, Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and other key agencies to receive the necessary work permits and to keep stakeholders informed of the plans.

 

All work crews will follow CDC COVID-19 guidelines regarding social distancing, masks, and hygiene.

 

About Ørsted North America, Offshore  

The Ørsted vision is a world that runs entirely on green energy. Ørsted ranks #1 in Corporate Knights’ 2020 index of the Global 100 most sustainable corporations in the world and is recognized on the CDP Climate Change A-List as a global leader on climate action. 

 

In the United States, Ørsted operates the Block Island Wind Farm, America’s first offshore wind farm, and constructed the two-turbine Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind pilot project – the first turbines to be installed in federal waters.  Ørsted has secured over 2,900 megawatts of additional capacity through five projects in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. Ørsted’s North American Offshore business is jointly headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, and Providence, Rhode Island, and employs more than 150 people. To learn more visit us.orsted.com or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter (@OrstedUS).  

 

About National Grid

National Grid (NYSE: NGG) is an electricity, natural gas, and clean energy delivery company serving more than 20 million people through our networks in New York and Massachusetts. National Grid is focused on building a smarter, stronger, cleaner energy future — transforming our networks with more reliable and resilient energy solutions to meet state climate goals and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

For more information, please visit our website, follow us on X (formerly Twitter), watch us on YouTube, like us on Facebook and find us on Instagram.

Media Contacts

Ted Kresse

Rhode Island

(401) 784-7730

Send an email to Contact 1

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