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Cape Wind

The Cape Wind Project was a proposed offshore wind energy project on Horseshoe Shoal in Nantucket Sound off Cape Cod, Massachusetts. It was projected to generate 1,500 gigawatt hours of electricity a year at a first-dollar cost of $2.6 billion.

Cape Wind
CountryUnited States
LocationHorseshoe Shoal, Nantucket Sound, Massachusetts
Coordinates41°32′31″N 70°19′16″W / 41.542°N 70.321°W / 41.542; -70.321
StatusDefunct
Owner(s)Cape Wind Associates
Wind farm
TypeOffshore
Hub height285 ft (87 m)
Rotor diameter364 ft (111 m)
Site area24 sq mi (62 km2)
Power generation
Make and modelSiemens Wind Power
Units planned130 x 3.6 MW[1]
Nameplate capacity
  • 454 MW
External links
Website (archived on February 2, 2017)

Cape Wind had arranged to borrow $2 billion from The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (BTMU), and Siemens had agreed to supply turbines for the project.[2] Some construction began in 2013, thereby qualifying the project for the federal production tax credit, which was expiring at the end of the year.[3]

It was approved[4][5] but then lost several key contracts and suffered several licensing and legislative setbacks. National Grid and Northeast Utilities eventually terminated their power purchase agreements in January 2015, making it difficult to obtain the necessary financing for the project to progress.[6]

The developer, Jim Gordon of Energy Management Inc.,[7] eventually terminated the lease rights for the site in late 2017.[8]

Plans edit

The proposed project was to cover 24 square miles (62 km2) and be located 4.8 miles (7.7 km) from Mashpee, Massachusetts, on the south coast of Cape Cod, and 15.8 miles (25.4 km) from the island town of Nantucket.

Cape Wind's developer, Energy Management Inc. (EMI), was a New England–based energy company with 35 years' experience in energy conservation and development. ESS Group, Inc. of Waltham, Massachusetts, was the environmental science specialist for the project. Cape Wind was also being assisted by Woods Hole Group, K2 Management, SgurrEnergy, AWS Truepower, and PMSS. Barclays was Cape Wind's Financial Advisor. The project envisioned 130 horizontal-axis wind turbines, each with a hub height of 285 feet (87 m). The blade diameter was 364 feet (111 m), with the lowest blade tip height at 75 feet (23 m) and the top blade tip height at 440 feet (130 m).[9] The turbines were to be sited between four and 11 miles offshore depending on the shoreline. At peak generation, the turbines were anticipated to generate 454 megawatts (MW) of electricity.[1]

The project was expected to produce an average of 170 MW of electricity, about 75% of the average electricity demand for Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket island combined.[10] Had it been built, it might have offset nearly a million tons of carbon dioxide a year and produced enough electricity to offset consumption of 113 million US gallons (430,000 m3) of oil annually.[11][12]

At the time the project was envisioned, 45% of the Cape region's electricity came from the nearby Canal Generating Plant in Sandwich, a bunker oil and natural gas run facility.[13][14] The Cape Wind proposal was distinct in that it was envisioned to directly offset petroleum combustion, unlike most of the United States where electrical power generation from oil is rare and power from coal, natural gas and nuclear is more common.

Additionally, this project would have reduced the amount of oil shipped to the Canal Generating Plant; fuel for this plant had been part of two major oil spills, the first on 15 December 1976, when the tanker Argo Merchant ran aground southeast of Nantucket Island, Massachusetts spilling 7.7 million US gallons (29,000 m3) of oil.[15] The second spill occurred in April 2003, when a Bouchard Company barge carrying oil for the Mirant Canal Generating Plant ran aground, spilling 98,000 US gallons (370,000 L) of oil, which killed 450 birds and shut down 100,000 acres (400 km2) of shell fishing beds.[16]

 
The best wind resources in Massachusetts, by far, are offshore. The Cape Wind site is between Cape Cod to the north and the islands of Nantucket, to the south, and Martha's Vineyard, to the west.

Approval process edit

Because the proposed turbines were to be over 3 nautical miles (5.6 km; 3.5 mi) from shore, they would have been subject to federal jurisdiction. However, near-shore infrastructure including roads and power cables made the project subject to state and local jurisdiction as well.[17] All necessary state and local pre-construction approvals were obtained by 2009. Major federal approvals were obtained 17 May 2010, with lease details and construction and operation permits to be granted as the project proceeded.

State and local approvals edit

At the state and local level, according to the Boston Globe, Cape Wind needed approval from the Cape Cod Commission; "a Chapter 91 license from the Department of Environmental Protection; a water quality certification from the state DEP; access permits from the Massachusetts Highway Department for work along state highways; a license from the Executive Office of Transportation for a railway crossing; orders of conditions from the Yarmouth and Barnstable Conservation Commissions; and road opening permits from Yarmouth and Barnstable."[18]

On 11 May 2005, the Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board (MEFSB) approved the application to build the wind farm. Opponents appealed the decision and on 18 December 2006 the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld the decision.[19][20]

In March 2007, the project received approval from Ian Bowles, the Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, as required by the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA).[17] In October 2007, the Cape Cod Commission declined to approve Cape Wind without further study of the impact by the developers.[21]

On 20 June 2008, the Barnstable Superior Court dismissed four of five counts against the MEPA certificate that had been filed by opposition groups and the Town of Barnstable. The fifth count was not considered ripe for a ruling since the matter was still pending before a state agency.[22]

On 22 May 2009, the Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board[23][24] issued a "Super Permit" to Cape Wind, overriding the Cape Cod Commission and obviating the need for further state and local approvals.[25]

On 31 August 2010, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled 4–2 that the state had the power to overrule community opposition and granted the Cape Wind project a suite of local permits it needed to start construction.[26]

On 28 December 2011, a ruling by "the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court gave its blessing to a novel power purchase agreement between Cape Wind and National Grid," as reported by the Boston Globe, and in so doing "the high court unanimously rejected criticisms by wind farm opponents of the state reviews of the agreement, under which National Grid would buy 50% of the wind farm's power."[27]

Federal approvals edit

At the federal level, Cape Wind originally applied for a permit in 2001 under Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 with the US Army Corps of Engineers. The Army Corps eventually presented a draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).[2] In a public comment period, many federal agencies, local governments, and community groups found that the draft EIS had deficiencies. Due to passage of the 2005 Energy Bill, the regulatory authority for off-shore energy projects had been transferred from the Army Corps to the Minerals Management Service (MMS) within the Department of the Interior. Whereas Cape Wind had expected to obtain approval quickly from the Army Corps, this transfer of authority to the MMS delayed the project.

The MMS issued a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) in January 2008, and a Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) in January 2009.[28]

On 4 January 2010, US Interior Secretary Ken Salazar called a meeting of principal parties to resolve remaining issues after the National Park Service ruled that Nantucket Sound was eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its cultural and spiritual significance to two Native American tribes. "After several years of review, it is now time to move the Cape Wind proposal to a final decision point. That is why I am gathering the principal parties together next week to consider the findings of the Keeper and to discuss how we might find a common-sense agreement on actions that could be taken to minimize and mitigate Cape Wind's potential impacts on historic and cultural resources. I am hopeful that an agreement among the parties can be reached by March 1. If an agreement among the parties can't be reached, I will be prepared to take the steps necessary to bring the permit process to conclusion. The public, the parties, and the permit applicants deserve certainty and resolution."[29]

On 22 March 2010, a hearing was held before the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. Proponents and opponents of the plan delivered testimony during the hearing. The council was to deliver their recommendations to Interior Secretary Salazar no later than 14 April 2010.[30]

On 28 April 2010, at a news conference in the Massachusetts Statehouse alongside governor Deval Patrick, a supporter of the project, Secretary Salazar announced "I am approving the Cape Wind project." The Preferred Alternative of Horseshoe Shoal was selected by the Record of Decision.[31][32]

The Federal Aviation Administration cleared the construction of the wind farm on 17 May 2010 after raising concerns that the wind turbine structures could interfere with radar system at nearby Otis Air Force Base. Cape Wind agreed to fix the base's system to ensure that it would not be affected by the wind farm.[33] On 28 October 2011, the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected the FAA's ruling. The court ordered the 'no hazard' determinations vacated and remanded back to the FAA.[34] On 15 August 2012 Cape Wind again received full approval from the FAA, which determined that the wind farm would cause no danger to aircraft operations.[35] However, Cape Wind had begun its planning, even without full federal approval.[36]

The Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound filed a lawsuit in June 2010, claiming that federal approvals violated the Endangered Species Act, Migratory Bird Treaty Act, and National Environmental Policy Act.[37]

On 6 October 2010, Interior Secretary Salazar announced that a 28-year lease had been signed, which would have cost Cape Wind an annual fee of $88,278 before construction, and a two to seven percent variable operating fee during production, based on revenue from selling the energy.[38][39]

On 22 November 2010, a 15-year power purchase agreement between Cape Wind and National Grid was signed for 50% of the electricity, at a price of 18.7¢/kWh,[40] which would have added $1.50 a month to the electricity bill of an average home.[41]

On 7 January 2011, Cape Wind announced it had received permits from the US Army Corps of Engineers and the US Environmental Protection Agency.[42]

On 18 April 2011, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement granted its necessary approval for the project.[43]

In Summer 2011, the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) filed a lawsuit against the federal government for allowing Cape Wind to move forward.[44] Contradicting the Aquinnahs, the Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe previously had expressed support for the project.[45]

In July 2016, an appeals court ruled that the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management had not obtained "sufficient site-specific data on seafloor" as obligated by the National Environmental Policy Act.[46]

Power purchase agreements edit

Cape Wind had signed a power purchase agreement with National Grid to sell half the project's output (i.e., about 750GW·h per year) for an initial price of 20.7¢/kW·h (later reduced to 18.7¢[47])—a price more than twice then-current retail rates (though increases in electrical prices in the winter of 2014 narrowed the difference significantly[48]). The deal was subject to approval by the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities (PUC).[49] In February 2012, NSTAR Utility agreed to a PPA equivalent of 129 MW capacity, a demand from PUC for allowing NSTAR and Northeast Utilities to complete a $4.8 billion merger.[50] The second power purchase agreement with state utility NSTAR for 27.5% of the output had also been approved by Massachusetts regulators.[51]

In January 2015, National Grid and Northeast Utilities cited Cape Wind's failure to obtain financing by 31 December 31, 2014 as grounds for terminating their contract. National Grid spokesman Jake Navarro said the company was "disappointed that Cape Wind has been unable to meet its commitments under the contract, resulting in today's termination of the power purchase agreement".[6] According to Cape Wind, the terminations were invalid because of contract provisions that would extend the deadlines.[6] After NStar and National Grid cancelled their contracts with Cape Wind, Cape Wind's leases with Quonset Development Corporation (for a port facility), Falmouth Harbor Marina (for headquarters), and New Bedford Marine Commerce (for staging and construction) were terminated.[52] Additionally, Cape Wind was suspended by Independent System Operator/New England from participating in New England's wholesale electricity markets.[52]

Controversy edit

Controversy surrounding Cape Wind had been focused on its proposed location in Nantucket Sound.[53] Because Cape Wind was positioning its project as a potential ecotourism destination, it was criticized for disguising (or greenwashing) its industrial aspects.[54]

Supporters of the project, led by the non-profit grassroots organization Clean Power Now,[55] cited wind's ability to displace oil and gas consumption with clean, locally produced energy and claimed that the project was the best option for much-needed new generating capacity in the region. It would have supplied 75% of the average electrical needs of Cape Cod and the Islands. The Massachusetts Audubon Society conditionally endorsed the project in March 2006 as safe for birds, but asked for further studies.[56]

Year round and summer residents expressed concerns over the location of the project: some claiming that the project would ruin scenic views from private properties as well as views from public properties like beaches, as the turbines would be only 4.8 miles from shore[57] and therefore would decrease property values, ruin popular areas for yachting, and cause other environmental problems. The Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound argued that Nantucket Sound was known worldwide for its wildlife and natural beauty.[58]

Phillip Scudder, owner of the Hy-Line ferry service on Cape Cod, originally opposed the project because he wondered how to navigate around the turbines when going to Martha's Vineyard, but changed his opposition to support in light of the economic opportunity to provide "eco-tours."[59]

Walter Cronkite drew attention by coming out against the wind farm; he later changed his opinion.[60] Other opponents included the late Senator Ted Kennedy,[61] former Secretary of State John Kerry, former Governor Mitt Romney, and businessman Bill Koch,[62] who has donated $1.5 million to the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound.

Proponents suggested that some opposition was motivated in part by ownership of real-estate on Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard or the mainland and that it raised issues of environmental justice. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose family's Kennedy Compound is within sight of the proposed wind farm, wrote an essay for the New York Times stating his support for wind power in general, but opposing the project.[63] However, this did not represent the view of most Massachusetts citizens: in a 2005 survey, 81% of adults supported the project, 61% of Cape Cod residents supported it, and 14% of adults opposed it.[64]

In 2012, then-candidate for Congress Joseph Kennedy III, in a break from other Kennedy family members, announced his support for the Cape Wind project.[65][66]

A 2007 book by Robert Whitcomb, Vice President and Editorial Page Editor of the Providence Journal, and Wendy Williams argued that the fight over Cape Wind involved a powerful, privileged minority imposing its will on the majority.[67]

In 2014, a judge dismissed the 26th lawsuit against Cape Wind and commented "There comes a point at which the right to litigate can become a vexatious abuse of the democratic process."[68][69]

In January 2015, Ian Bowles, the Massachusetts Energy and Environment head, cited the recent breach of contract from Cape Wind as indicating that the development most likely had been abandoned, "Presumably, this means the project will not move forward."[6]

2006 election edit

Cape Wind was an issue in the 2006 election for Governor of Massachusetts. The winner, Democrat Deval Patrick, supported the project; his Republican opponent, former Lieutenant Governor Kerry Healey, opposed it.[70][71]

2012 election edit

An article by Grist.org on 17 July 2012[72] explained that Mitt Romney strongly opposed the Cape Wind project beginning in 2006. If elected Romney could have severely affected the project's continuation, which was set to begin building in 2013. William Koch, who opposed the Cape Wind project, was also a major contributor to Romney's presidential election, donating a record two million dollars.[73]

In the 2012 Massachusetts Senate race, Scott Brown, the Republican incumbent, opposed Cape Wind while his Democratic challenger and the election winner, Elizabeth Warren supported the project.[74]

Movies and TV edit

In 2003 a documentary film entitled Wind Over Water was released about the controversy over the Cape Wind Project. The film by journalist Ole Tangen, Jr. chronicled the debate as it unfolded on the Cape. An independent production, the filmmaker interviewed subjects from both sides of the debate including Jim Gordon, the driving force behind Cape Wind and Isaac Rosen, then director of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound. Focusing also on wind power in general, Wind Over Water featured aerial footage of the offshore wind farm at Horns Rev in Denmark and footage of various wind farms in the U. On 6 December 2003 the film made its world and Cape Cod premiere at the Lillie Auditorium in Woods Hole.

Satirical news correspondent Jason Jones of The Daily Show also covered the Cape Wind project.[75]

A feature-length documentary about the Cape Wind project, entitled Cape Spin: An American Power Struggle, had pre-release screenings in the summer of 2011.[76]

Books edit

Wendy Williams and Robert Whitcomb wrote a book about the project's history called Cape Wind: Money, Celebrity, Class, Politics and the Battle for Our Energy Future on Nantucket Sound.[77] In an interview, one of the authors stated that the fight over Cape Wind was a case of "a very small group of people, with more money than most of us can possibly imagine, who decided from the very beginning [...] that they didn't want it there, it would upset their martini time."[67]

Public opinion survey results edit

A 2007 Opinion Research Corporation (ORC) survey of 600 state residents found that 93% of Massachusetts residents agreed that the state should be "a national leader in using cleaner and renewable energy on a large scale by moving ahead with offshore wind power" and other clean energy initiatives. The statement was supported by 78% of those living on the Cape and on the Islands.[78]

The 2007 ORC survey also found that 84% of Massachusetts residents – including 58% of those living on the Cape and on the Islands – explicitly supported "the proposed Cape Wind offshore wind farm that would involve wind turbines being placed in Nantucket Sound about five and a half miles from the Town of Hyannis." (A June 2006 survey posed the same question and found 81% support statewide and 61% in Cape Cod/the Islands.)[78]

In 2007, 78% of Massachusetts residents surveyed, including 61% of those living on the Cape and on the Islands, supported wind as the best energy resource to provide electricity to Cape Cod and the Islands. Statewide, the support for other alternatives was as follows: nuclear (10%); coal (4%); and other (5%).[78]

Clean renewable energy was widely supported over nuclear power in Massachusetts, including on the Cape and on the Islands. Massachusetts residents expressed preference for solar power (91%), more energy conservation (90%), and wind power (89%) used first before resorting to more nuclear power. On the Cape and on the Islands, the views were similar, with strong support for wind power (75%); conservation (81%); and solar (84%).[78]

2007 survey results were based on telephone interviews conducted among a sample of 600 householders aged18 and over. Interviewing was completed by Opinion Research Corporation for the Newton-based Civil Society Institute,[79] during July and August 2007.[78]

During the 4 November 2008 election, 87% of voters in eleven Massachusetts towns on the south shore, near but not on the Cape, voted yes on Question 4, a non-binding question that read, "Should the state representative from this district be instructed to vote in favor of legislation that would support the development of Cape Wind in Nantucket Sound and other possible future onshore and offshore wind power developments in Massachusetts?" The measure was voted on by the towns of Braintree, Holbrook, Randolph, Cohasset, Hingham, Hull, Marshfield, Scituate, Hanover, Norwell, and Rockland.[80] A 2009 poll by the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce showed that 55% of its members opposed the project and 41% supported it.[81]

A 2010 poll by the Boston Globe found that 69% of respondents supported Cape Wind, and 20% opposed it. Questions about cost found that half of respondents said they would not support paying higher prices for the project's electricity. In general, however, many respondents said they would be in favor of paying higher rates if it meant getting electricity from cleaner sources. Forty-two percent said they would be willing to pay more, while seven percent were unsure.[82]

In 2011, "Earlier that year, the Civil Society Institute commissioned an independent scientific survey of public opinion on Cape Wind that found 81% support in the State of Massachusetts, and their sub-sample of Cape and Islands residents also found more support than opposition."[83]

In 2011, Mass Inc. polling group hosted a poll, "The 80% Challenge: A Survey of Climate Change Opinion and Action in Massachusetts". Its findings showed "when asked about future energy needs, large majorities said they would like to see more reliance on solar power (87%), wind power (86%), and natural gas (64%), far higher than levels who want to see more coal (21%), oil (14%) or nuclear power (31%)." Furthermore, "The survey showed, among many factors, strong support for renewable energy, with eight in ten residents willing to pay an extra one dollar, and 60% saying they would pay up to five dollars more for renewable energy over traditional sources like oil or coal."[84]

A 2013 survey conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center polled 503 Massachusetts residents about the Cape Wind project. More respondents opposed the project than supported it and 50% thought it should be halted. Nearly two-thirds wanted utilities to buy less expensive power instead of more expensive renewable sources.[85]

Cost edit

In 2010, the Massachusetts Attorney General's office estimated that Cape Wind would ultimately cost $2.5 billion. Monetary costs of the electricity generated by the project were estimated to be double the 2010 price of traditional fossil fuels.[86]

In 2014, the Republican side of the House voted to block a $150 million loan guarantee for Cape Wind, acknowledging that the block was narrowly targeted.[87] The project had a $600 million loan guarantee from the Danish export credit agency, their biggest ever, and another $200 million from PensionDanmark; combined funding amounted to $1.45 billion.[88]

Other Cape Cod wind projects edit

According to a report in the Boston Globe 24 May 2006, Jay M. Cashman, owner of a large construction company that built part of the Big Dig, proposed to build a $750 million wind farm in Buzzards Bay, about 20 miles (32 km) west of the proposed Cape Wind site. The Cashman farm would have been closer (two miles) to shore and would have consisted of 120 turbines, each 450 feet (140 m) tall. The projected generation capacity was 300 MW. According to the Globe, some opponents of the Cape Wind project expressed interest in the Cashman plan.[89]

In February, 2008, state law was amended removing a prohibition on the construction of electrical generating facilities within ocean sanctuaries.[90]

Vineyard Wind began construction in 2021.

See also edit

References edit

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  77. ^ Whitcomb, Robert; Wendy M. Williams; Robert F. Whitcomb (May 2007). Cape Wind, Money, Celebrity, Class, Politics, and the Battle for Our Energy Future on Nantucket Sound. Public Affairs. p. 326. ISBN 978-1-58648-397-5.
  78. ^ a b c d e MA, Civil Society Institute, Newton. . Archived from the original on 2009-02-09. Retrieved 2020-02-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  80. ^ . Cape Wind Associates. November 6, 2008. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  81. ^ Cape Cod Chamber Poll Finds 55% Opposed to Controversial Cape Wind Project
  82. ^ Wirzbicki, Alan (September 27, 2010). "In poll, edge goes to sales tax cut". The Boston Globe.
  83. ^ Walker. "So whom do you believe?". Cape Cod Today. Retrieved 2012-08-13.[dead link]
  84. ^ "Massachusetts residents strongly prefer wind, solar, and gas over oil, coal, and nuclear power". Mass Inc Polling Group. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
  85. ^ "Support for Cape Wind Project Has Collapsed Since 2007 – New England Ratepayers Association". Archived from the original on 2016-05-19. Retrieved 2015-05-08.
  86. ^ Daley, Beth (October 10, 2010). "Cape Wind backers blew right by cost". The Boston Globe.
  87. ^ Juliano, Nick. "House passes $34B energy-water spending bill" Environmental and energy news, 11 July 2014. Accessed: 19 July 2014. on 19 July 2014.
  88. ^ Johansen, Mathias Ørsborg. "American politicians tease Cape Wind" (in Danish) EnergiWatch, 18 July 2014. Accessed: 19 July 2014. on 19 July 2014.
  89. ^ Buzzards Bay Wind Farm Proposed March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Boston.com website, May 24, 2006.
  90. ^ Proposed Wind Farms in Buzzards Bay April 22, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, BuzzardsBay.org website.

Further reading edit

  • Cichon, Meg. Offshore Wind Updates: Cape Wind Financing, Deepwater Proposal, Massive UK Project Approvals, RenewableEnergyWorld.com website, March 27, 2014.
  • Handwerk, Brian. , National Geographic website, December 5, 2013.
  • Seelyefeb, Katharine Q. Funds and New Timetable for Offshore Wind Farm in Massachusetts, The New York Times, February 26, 2014.

External links edit

cape, wind, project, proposed, offshore, wind, energy, project, horseshoe, shoal, nantucket, sound, cape, massachusetts, projected, generate, gigawatt, hours, electricity, year, first, dollar, cost, billion, countryunited, stateslocationhorseshoe, shoal, nantu. The Cape Wind Project was a proposed offshore wind energy project on Horseshoe Shoal in Nantucket Sound off Cape Cod Massachusetts It was projected to generate 1 500 gigawatt hours of electricity a year at a first dollar cost of 2 6 billion Cape WindCountryUnited StatesLocationHorseshoe Shoal Nantucket Sound MassachusettsCoordinates41 32 31 N 70 19 16 W 41 542 N 70 321 W 41 542 70 321StatusDefunctOwner s Cape Wind AssociatesWind farmTypeOffshoreHub height285 ft 87 m Rotor diameter364 ft 111 m Site area24 sq mi 62 km2 Power generationMake and modelSiemens Wind PowerUnits planned130 x 3 6 MW 1 Nameplate capacity454 MWExternal linksWebsitecapewind org archived on February 2 2017 edit on Wikidata Cape Wind had arranged to borrow 2 billion from The Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ BTMU and Siemens had agreed to supply turbines for the project 2 Some construction began in 2013 thereby qualifying the project for the federal production tax credit which was expiring at the end of the year 3 It was approved 4 5 but then lost several key contracts and suffered several licensing and legislative setbacks National Grid and Northeast Utilities eventually terminated their power purchase agreements in January 2015 making it difficult to obtain the necessary financing for the project to progress 6 The developer Jim Gordon of Energy Management Inc 7 eventually terminated the lease rights for the site in late 2017 8 Contents 1 Plans 2 Approval process 2 1 State and local approvals 2 2 Federal approvals 3 Power purchase agreements 4 Controversy 4 1 2006 election 4 2 2012 election 4 3 Movies and TV 4 4 Books 4 5 Public opinion survey results 4 6 Cost 5 Other Cape Cod wind projects 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPlans editParts of this article those related to Canal Generating Plant need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2015 The proposed project was to cover 24 square miles 62 km2 and be located 4 8 miles 7 7 km from Mashpee Massachusetts on the south coast of Cape Cod and 15 8 miles 25 4 km from the island town of Nantucket Cape Wind s developer Energy Management Inc EMI was a New England based energy company with 35 years experience in energy conservation and development ESS Group Inc of Waltham Massachusetts was the environmental science specialist for the project Cape Wind was also being assisted by Woods Hole Group K2 Management SgurrEnergy AWS Truepower and PMSS Barclays was Cape Wind s Financial Advisor The project envisioned 130 horizontal axis wind turbines each with a hub height of 285 feet 87 m The blade diameter was 364 feet 111 m with the lowest blade tip height at 75 feet 23 m and the top blade tip height at 440 feet 130 m 9 The turbines were to be sited between four and 11 miles offshore depending on the shoreline At peak generation the turbines were anticipated to generate 454 megawatts MW of electricity 1 The project was expected to produce an average of 170 MW of electricity about 75 of the average electricity demand for Cape Cod Martha s Vineyard and Nantucket island combined 10 Had it been built it might have offset nearly a million tons of carbon dioxide a year and produced enough electricity to offset consumption of 113 million US gallons 430 000 m3 of oil annually 11 12 At the time the project was envisioned 45 of the Cape region s electricity came from the nearby Canal Generating Plant in Sandwich a bunker oil and natural gas run facility 13 14 The Cape Wind proposal was distinct in that it was envisioned to directly offset petroleum combustion unlike most of the United States where electrical power generation from oil is rare and power from coal natural gas and nuclear is more common Additionally this project would have reduced the amount of oil shipped to the Canal Generating Plant fuel for this plant had been part of two major oil spills the first on 15 December 1976 when the tanker Argo Merchant ran aground southeast of Nantucket Island Massachusetts spilling 7 7 million US gallons 29 000 m3 of oil 15 The second spill occurred in April 2003 when a Bouchard Company barge carrying oil for the Mirant Canal Generating Plant ran aground spilling 98 000 US gallons 370 000 L of oil which killed 450 birds and shut down 100 000 acres 400 km2 of shell fishing beds 16 nbsp The best wind resources in Massachusetts by far are offshore The Cape Wind site is between Cape Cod to the north and the islands of Nantucket to the south and Martha s Vineyard to the west Approval process editBecause the proposed turbines were to be over 3 nautical miles 5 6 km 3 5 mi from shore they would have been subject to federal jurisdiction However near shore infrastructure including roads and power cables made the project subject to state and local jurisdiction as well 17 All necessary state and local pre construction approvals were obtained by 2009 Major federal approvals were obtained 17 May 2010 with lease details and construction and operation permits to be granted as the project proceeded State and local approvals edit At the state and local level according to the Boston Globe Cape Wind needed approval from the Cape Cod Commission a Chapter 91 license from the Department of Environmental Protection a water quality certification from the state DEP access permits from the Massachusetts Highway Department for work along state highways a license from the Executive Office of Transportation for a railway crossing orders of conditions from the Yarmouth and Barnstable Conservation Commissions and road opening permits from Yarmouth and Barnstable 18 On 11 May 2005 the Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board MEFSB approved the application to build the wind farm Opponents appealed the decision and on 18 December 2006 the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld the decision 19 20 In March 2007 the project received approval from Ian Bowles the Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs as required by the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act MEPA 17 In October 2007 the Cape Cod Commission declined to approve Cape Wind without further study of the impact by the developers 21 On 20 June 2008 the Barnstable Superior Court dismissed four of five counts against the MEPA certificate that had been filed by opposition groups and the Town of Barnstable The fifth count was not considered ripe for a ruling since the matter was still pending before a state agency 22 On 22 May 2009 the Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board 23 24 issued a Super Permit to Cape Wind overriding the Cape Cod Commission and obviating the need for further state and local approvals 25 On 31 August 2010 the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled 4 2 that the state had the power to overrule community opposition and granted the Cape Wind project a suite of local permits it needed to start construction 26 On 28 December 2011 a ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court gave its blessing to a novel power purchase agreement between Cape Wind and National Grid as reported by the Boston Globe and in so doing the high court unanimously rejected criticisms by wind farm opponents of the state reviews of the agreement under which National Grid would buy 50 of the wind farm s power 27 Federal approvals edit At the federal level Cape Wind originally applied for a permit in 2001 under Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 with the US Army Corps of Engineers The Army Corps eventually presented a draft Environmental Impact Statement EIS 2 In a public comment period many federal agencies local governments and community groups found that the draft EIS had deficiencies Due to passage of the 2005 Energy Bill the regulatory authority for off shore energy projects had been transferred from the Army Corps to the Minerals Management Service MMS within the Department of the Interior Whereas Cape Wind had expected to obtain approval quickly from the Army Corps this transfer of authority to the MMS delayed the project The MMS issued a Draft Environmental Impact Statement DEIS in January 2008 and a Final Environmental Impact Report FEIR in January 2009 28 On 4 January 2010 US Interior Secretary Ken Salazar called a meeting of principal parties to resolve remaining issues after the National Park Service ruled that Nantucket Sound was eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its cultural and spiritual significance to two Native American tribes After several years of review it is now time to move the Cape Wind proposal to a final decision point That is why I am gathering the principal parties together next week to consider the findings of the Keeper and to discuss how we might find a common sense agreement on actions that could be taken to minimize and mitigate Cape Wind s potential impacts on historic and cultural resources I am hopeful that an agreement among the parties can be reached by March 1 If an agreement among the parties can t be reached I will be prepared to take the steps necessary to bring the permit process to conclusion The public the parties and the permit applicants deserve certainty and resolution 29 On 22 March 2010 a hearing was held before the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation Proponents and opponents of the plan delivered testimony during the hearing The council was to deliver their recommendations to Interior Secretary Salazar no later than 14 April 2010 30 On 28 April 2010 at a news conference in the Massachusetts Statehouse alongside governor Deval Patrick a supporter of the project Secretary Salazar announced I am approving the Cape Wind project The Preferred Alternative of Horseshoe Shoal was selected by the Record of Decision 31 32 The Federal Aviation Administration cleared the construction of the wind farm on 17 May 2010 after raising concerns that the wind turbine structures could interfere with radar system at nearby Otis Air Force Base Cape Wind agreed to fix the base s system to ensure that it would not be affected by the wind farm 33 On 28 October 2011 the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected the FAA s ruling The court ordered the no hazard determinations vacated and remanded back to the FAA 34 On 15 August 2012 Cape Wind again received full approval from the FAA which determined that the wind farm would cause no danger to aircraft operations 35 However Cape Wind had begun its planning even without full federal approval 36 The Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound filed a lawsuit in June 2010 claiming that federal approvals violated the Endangered Species Act Migratory Bird Treaty Act and National Environmental Policy Act 37 On 6 October 2010 Interior Secretary Salazar announced that a 28 year lease had been signed which would have cost Cape Wind an annual fee of 88 278 before construction and a two to seven percent variable operating fee during production based on revenue from selling the energy 38 39 On 22 November 2010 a 15 year power purchase agreement between Cape Wind and National Grid was signed for 50 of the electricity at a price of 18 7 kWh 40 which would have added 1 50 a month to the electricity bill of an average home 41 On 7 January 2011 Cape Wind announced it had received permits from the US Army Corps of Engineers and the US Environmental Protection Agency 42 On 18 April 2011 the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Regulation and Enforcement granted its necessary approval for the project 43 In Summer 2011 the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head Aquinnah filed a lawsuit against the federal government for allowing Cape Wind to move forward 44 Contradicting the Aquinnahs the Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe previously had expressed support for the project 45 In July 2016 an appeals court ruled that the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management had not obtained sufficient site specific data on seafloor as obligated by the National Environmental Policy Act 46 Power purchase agreements editCape Wind had signed a power purchase agreement with National Grid to sell half the project s output i e about 750GW h per year for an initial price of 20 7 kW h later reduced to 18 7 47 a price more than twice then current retail rates though increases in electrical prices in the winter of 2014 narrowed the difference significantly 48 The deal was subject to approval by the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities PUC 49 In February 2012 NSTAR Utility agreed to a PPA equivalent of 129 MW capacity a demand from PUC for allowing NSTAR and Northeast Utilities to complete a 4 8 billion merger 50 The second power purchase agreement with state utility NSTAR for 27 5 of the output had also been approved by Massachusetts regulators 51 In January 2015 National Grid and Northeast Utilities cited Cape Wind s failure to obtain financing by 31 December 31 2014 as grounds for terminating their contract National Grid spokesman Jake Navarro said the company was disappointed that Cape Wind has been unable to meet its commitments under the contract resulting in today s termination of the power purchase agreement 6 According to Cape Wind the terminations were invalid because of contract provisions that would extend the deadlines 6 After NStar and National Grid cancelled their contracts with Cape Wind Cape Wind s leases with Quonset Development Corporation for a port facility Falmouth Harbor Marina for headquarters and New Bedford Marine Commerce for staging and construction were terminated 52 Additionally Cape Wind was suspended by Independent System Operator New England from participating in New England s wholesale electricity markets 52 Controversy editControversy surrounding Cape Wind had been focused on its proposed location in Nantucket Sound 53 Because Cape Wind was positioning its project as a potential ecotourism destination it was criticized for disguising or greenwashing its industrial aspects 54 Supporters of the project led by the non profit grassroots organization Clean Power Now 55 cited wind s ability to displace oil and gas consumption with clean locally produced energy and claimed that the project was the best option for much needed new generating capacity in the region It would have supplied 75 of the average electrical needs of Cape Cod and the Islands The Massachusetts Audubon Society conditionally endorsed the project in March 2006 as safe for birds but asked for further studies 56 Year round and summer residents expressed concerns over the location of the project some claiming that the project would ruin scenic views from private properties as well as views from public properties like beaches as the turbines would be only 4 8 miles from shore 57 and therefore would decrease property values ruin popular areas for yachting and cause other environmental problems The Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound argued that Nantucket Sound was known worldwide for its wildlife and natural beauty 58 Phillip Scudder owner of the Hy Line ferry service on Cape Cod originally opposed the project because he wondered how to navigate around the turbines when going to Martha s Vineyard but changed his opposition to support in light of the economic opportunity to provide eco tours 59 Walter Cronkite drew attention by coming out against the wind farm he later changed his opinion 60 Other opponents included the late Senator Ted Kennedy 61 former Secretary of State John Kerry former Governor Mitt Romney and businessman Bill Koch 62 who has donated 1 5 million to the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound Proponents suggested that some opposition was motivated in part by ownership of real estate on Nantucket Martha s Vineyard or the mainland and that it raised issues of environmental justice Robert F Kennedy Jr whose family s Kennedy Compound is within sight of the proposed wind farm wrote an essay for the New York Times stating his support for wind power in general but opposing the project 63 However this did not represent the view of most Massachusetts citizens in a 2005 survey 81 of adults supported the project 61 of Cape Cod residents supported it and 14 of adults opposed it 64 In 2012 then candidate for Congress Joseph Kennedy III in a break from other Kennedy family members announced his support for the Cape Wind project 65 66 A 2007 book by Robert Whitcomb Vice President and Editorial Page Editor of the Providence Journal and Wendy Williams argued that the fight over Cape Wind involved a powerful privileged minority imposing its will on the majority 67 In 2014 a judge dismissed the 26th lawsuit against Cape Wind and commented There comes a point at which the right to litigate can become a vexatious abuse of the democratic process 68 69 In January 2015 Ian Bowles the Massachusetts Energy and Environment head cited the recent breach of contract from Cape Wind as indicating that the development most likely had been abandoned Presumably this means the project will not move forward 6 2006 election edit Cape Wind was an issue in the 2006 election for Governor of Massachusetts The winner Democrat Deval Patrick supported the project his Republican opponent former Lieutenant Governor Kerry Healey opposed it 70 71 2012 election edit An article by Grist org on 17 July 2012 72 explained that Mitt Romney strongly opposed the Cape Wind project beginning in 2006 If elected Romney could have severely affected the project s continuation which was set to begin building in 2013 William Koch who opposed the Cape Wind project was also a major contributor to Romney s presidential election donating a record two million dollars 73 In the 2012 Massachusetts Senate race Scott Brown the Republican incumbent opposed Cape Wind while his Democratic challenger and the election winner Elizabeth Warren supported the project 74 Movies and TV edit In 2003 a documentary film entitled Wind Over Water was released about the controversy over the Cape Wind Project The film by journalist Ole Tangen Jr chronicled the debate as it unfolded on the Cape An independent production the filmmaker interviewed subjects from both sides of the debate including Jim Gordon the driving force behind Cape Wind and Isaac Rosen then director of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound Focusing also on wind power in general Wind Over Water featured aerial footage of the offshore wind farm at Horns Rev in Denmark and footage of various wind farms in the U On 6 December 2003 the film made its world and Cape Cod premiere at the Lillie Auditorium in Woods Hole Satirical news correspondent Jason Jones of The Daily Show also covered the Cape Wind project 75 A feature length documentary about the Cape Wind project entitled Cape Spin An American Power Struggle had pre release screenings in the summer of 2011 76 Books edit Wendy Williams and Robert Whitcomb wrote a book about the project s history called Cape Wind Money Celebrity Class Politics and the Battle for Our Energy Future on Nantucket Sound 77 In an interview one of the authors stated that the fight over Cape Wind was a case of a very small group of people with more money than most of us can possibly imagine who decided from the very beginning that they didn t want it there it would upset their martini time 67 Public opinion survey results edit A 2007 Opinion Research Corporation ORC survey of 600 state residents found that 93 of Massachusetts residents agreed that the state should be a national leader in using cleaner and renewable energy on a large scale by moving ahead with offshore wind power and other clean energy initiatives The statement was supported by 78 of those living on the Cape and on the Islands 78 The 2007 ORC survey also found that 84 of Massachusetts residents including 58 of those living on the Cape and on the Islands explicitly supported the proposed Cape Wind offshore wind farm that would involve wind turbines being placed in Nantucket Sound about five and a half miles from the Town of Hyannis A June 2006 survey posed the same question and found 81 support statewide and 61 in Cape Cod the Islands 78 In 2007 78 of Massachusetts residents surveyed including 61 of those living on the Cape and on the Islands supported wind as the best energy resource to provide electricity to Cape Cod and the Islands Statewide the support for other alternatives was as follows nuclear 10 coal 4 and other 5 78 Clean renewable energy was widely supported over nuclear power in Massachusetts including on the Cape and on the Islands Massachusetts residents expressed preference for solar power 91 more energy conservation 90 and wind power 89 used first before resorting to more nuclear power On the Cape and on the Islands the views were similar with strong support for wind power 75 conservation 81 and solar 84 78 2007 survey results were based on telephone interviews conducted among a sample of 600 householders aged18 and over Interviewing was completed by Opinion Research Corporation for the Newton based Civil Society Institute 79 during July and August 2007 78 During the 4 November 2008 election 87 of voters in eleven Massachusetts towns on the south shore near but not on the Cape voted yes on Question 4 a non binding question that read Should the state representative from this district be instructed to vote in favor of legislation that would support the development of Cape Wind in Nantucket Sound and other possible future onshore and offshore wind power developments in Massachusetts The measure was voted on by the towns of Braintree Holbrook Randolph Cohasset Hingham Hull Marshfield Scituate Hanover Norwell and Rockland 80 A 2009 poll by the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce showed that 55 of its members opposed the project and 41 supported it 81 A 2010 poll by the Boston Globe found that 69 of respondents supported Cape Wind and 20 opposed it Questions about cost found that half of respondents said they would not support paying higher prices for the project s electricity In general however many respondents said they would be in favor of paying higher rates if it meant getting electricity from cleaner sources Forty two percent said they would be willing to pay more while seven percent were unsure 82 In 2011 Earlier that year the Civil Society Institute commissioned an independent scientific survey of public opinion on Cape Wind that found 81 support in the State of Massachusetts and their sub sample of Cape and Islands residents also found more support than opposition 83 In 2011 Mass Inc polling group hosted a poll The 80 Challenge A Survey of Climate Change Opinion and Action in Massachusetts Its findings showed when asked about future energy needs large majorities said they would like to see more reliance on solar power 87 wind power 86 and natural gas 64 far higher than levels who want to see more coal 21 oil 14 or nuclear power 31 Furthermore The survey showed among many factors strong support for renewable energy with eight in ten residents willing to pay an extra one dollar and 60 saying they would pay up to five dollars more for renewable energy over traditional sources like oil or coal 84 A 2013 survey conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center polled 503 Massachusetts residents about the Cape Wind project More respondents opposed the project than supported it and 50 thought it should be halted Nearly two thirds wanted utilities to buy less expensive power instead of more expensive renewable sources 85 Cost edit In 2010 the Massachusetts Attorney General s office estimated that Cape Wind would ultimately cost 2 5 billion Monetary costs of the electricity generated by the project were estimated to be double the 2010 price of traditional fossil fuels 86 In 2014 the Republican side of the House voted to block a 150 million loan guarantee for Cape Wind acknowledging that the block was narrowly targeted 87 The project had a 600 million loan guarantee from the Danish export credit agency their biggest ever and another 200 million from PensionDanmark combined funding amounted to 1 45 billion 88 Other Cape Cod wind projects editAccording to a report in the Boston Globe 24 May 2006 Jay M Cashman owner of a large construction company that built part of the Big Dig proposed to build a 750 million wind farm in Buzzards Bay about 20 miles 32 km west of the proposed Cape Wind site The Cashman farm would have been closer two miles to shore and would have consisted of 120 turbines each 450 feet 140 m tall The projected generation capacity was 300 MW According to the Globe some opponents of the Cape Wind project expressed interest in the Cashman plan 89 In February 2008 state law was amended removing a prohibition on the construction of electrical generating facilities within ocean sanctuaries 90 Vineyard Wind began construction in 2021 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Weather portal nbsp Renewable energy portal Energy Policy Act of 2005 Block Island Wind Farm List of offshore wind farms in the United States Vineyard Wind Mayflower Wind Wind power in MassachusettsReferences edit a b Cape Wind Basics Cape Wind Associates Archived from the original on 2015 11 10 Retrieved 2015 12 30 a b Gossens Ehren Wind Power Rivals Coal With 1 Billion Order From Buffett Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on December 17 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Cassidy Patrick March 19 2013 Deal reached on lead bank for Cape Wind Cape Cod Times Archived from the original on 2013 12 31 Retrieved March 27 2013 Krasny Ros Cape Wind first U S offshore wind farm approved Archived November 21 2010 at the Wayback Machine Reuters 28 April 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Jackson Derrick Z The winds of change Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Boston Globe 1 May 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 a b c d O Sullivan Jim January 7 2015 Two utilities opt out of Cape Wind The Boston Globe CNN The wind man who beat Cape Cod s elite Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine CNN website April 29 2010 Chesto Jon December 1 2017 R I P Cape Wind The Boston Globe Cape Wind America s First Offshore Wind Farm on Nantucket Sound Archived September 23 2006 at the Wayback Machine Salamone Charlie October 31 2002 Cape amp Islands Electric Supply Cape Wind Project Impact PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 23 2006 Cape Wind website Archived May 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2009 05 12 Offsetting carbon emissions one ton at a time Penn Today Retrieved 2022 06 18 Canal Generating Plant Mirant Corporation Archived from the original on 2010 04 01 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Leaning John July 4 2004 Report Wind farm could ease gas demand Cape Cod Times Archived from the original on 2006 03 31 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Draffan George Major Oil Spills Endgame Research Archived from the original on 2012 04 09 Retrieved 2009 05 12 LaPlante Joseph R Bouchard under fire for outrageous actions The Standard Times Retrieved 2009 05 12 permanent dead link a b Ebbert Stephanie March 31 2007 Cape Wind moves on to federal review The Boston Globe Retrieved 2009 05 12 Cape Wind appeals ruling that blocked wind farm in Nantucket Sound The Boston Globe November 21 2007 Archived from the original on February 9 2009 Favorable Cape Wind Decision Upheld By Supreme Judicial Court Archived February 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine media release CapeWind org website December 18 2006 Nation s First Off Shore Wind Farm Wins Court Battle AmericanCityandCounty com website December 19 2006 Ebbert Stephanie October 19 2007 Cape Cod panel denies permit for wind farm The Boston Globe Barnstable judge validates Cape Wind s MEPA Certificate Nantucket Independent 25 June 2008 Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board Archived June 26 2010 at the Wayback Machine General Laws CHAPTER 164 Section 69H Mass gov Retrieved 2012 03 24 Key Wind Farm Permits Approved Archived March 6 2012 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 4 June 2009 Daley Beth August 31 2010 SJC gives Cape Wind go ahead to start construction The Boston Globe Johnson Carolyn Y Ellement John R December 29 2011 Cape Wind buoyed as SJC allows utility deal The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2012 06 19 Retrieved 2012 01 17 MMS Cape Wind page Archived July 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine report Archived August 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Minerals Management Service January 2009 Secretary Salazar Initiates Final Review of Cape Wind Proposal Archived May 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Fate of Cape Wind Decided Washington D C Associated Press April 27 2010 Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Seelye Katharine Q April 28 2010 Regulators Approve First Offshore Wind Farm in U S The New York Times BBC News US government approves first offshore wind farm 2010 04 28 Seelye Katharine Q May 17 2010 Massachusetts F A A Clears Wind Farm The New York Times Lindsay Jay 28 October 2011 Associated Press USA Today Retrieved 17 January 2012 FAA rules Cape Wind project poses no hazard to planes Archived from the original on August 17 2012 Levitz Jennifer Cape Cod Wind Farm Tiptoes Ahead The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2008 12 12 Native amp American Indian News Culture Music Art and More Indian Country Today Media Network com Indiancountrytoday com Retrieved 2012 03 24 Secretary Salazar Promotes Clean Energy Signs Cape Wind Lease at AWEA Conference Doi gov 2010 10 06 Retrieved 2012 03 24 Daley Beth October 6 2010 Cape Wind awarded federal lease The Boston Globe Vaughan Ashley Massachusetts OK power deal in another win for offshore wind project Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine CNN 23 November 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Cassidy Patrick Cape Wind wins approval of deal to sell power Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine South Coast Today 23 November 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Cape Wind Completes Permitting Process Archived March 9 2012 at the Wayback Machine Cape Wind Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Retrieved 13 July 2017 Daley Beth Wampanoag tribe sues over Cape Wind The Boston Globe Archived from the original on November 3 2012 Retrieved 12 July 2011 Head of Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe sends Salazar letter of support for Cape Wind Cape Cod Today Archived from the original on 2011 09 29 Retrieved 12 July 2011 Cape Wind Project Suffers Loss at Federal Appeals Court 2016 07 15 Dotson Sharryn Changing Tides in Offshore Wind Archived December 23 2014 at the Wayback Machine Power Engineering 13 October 2010 Retrieved 14 October 2010 Seelye Katharine 2014 12 13 Even Before Long Winter Begins Energy Bills Send Shivers in New England The New York Times Retrieved 14 December 2014 Wald Matthew L May 7 2010 Selling Cape Wind s Future Wares The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 08 Quilter James Cape Wind to proceed after 129MW NStar PPA Windpower Monthly 16 February 2012 Accessed 19 February 2012 Mass regulators approve Cape Wind power contract Governors Wind Energy Coalition a b Legere Christine March 12 2015 Longtime Cape Wind spokesman resigns Cape Cod Times Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound Archived January 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Cassidy Chris 2010 10 30 Cape Wind Don t be tricked Boston Herald Retrieved 2012 03 24 Clean Power Now Archived April 22 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2009 05 12 Daley Beth March 29 2006 Audubon review supports wind farm The Boston Globe Retrieved 2009 05 12 Salsa Labs Ingredients for Organizing Org2 democracyinaction org 2011 08 24 Archived from the original on April 30 2011 Retrieved 2012 03 24 Nantucket Sound Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound 2007 Archived from the original on 2009 12 21 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Levitz Jennifer 10 August 2012 Cape Cod Wind Farm Tiptoes Ahead The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 13 August 2012 Ebbert Stephanie August 29 2003 Cronkite urges full review of wind farm proposal The Boston Globe Neal Rome June 26 2003 Storm Over Mass Windmill Plan CBS News Doyle Tim September 21 2006 Koch s New Fight Forbes Kennedy Robert Jr December 16 2005 An Ill Wind Off Cape Cod The New York Times Retrieved 2009 05 12 Conte Frank September 1 2006 Cape Wind Has Powerful Critics Supporters Budget amp Tax News The Heartland Institute Retrieved 2009 05 12 Young Kennedy Breaks with Family Over Cape Wind Archived November 15 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Breakthrough September 10 2012 Sampson Zachary Joseph Kennedy III Breaks from Family s Position Declares Support for Cape Wind Archived March 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Boston Globe September 1 2012 a b Lacey Stephen The Saga Behind Cape Wind Growing Opportunities in the Renewable Energy Sector RenewableEnergyAccess com website August 16 2007 Stearns Richard G CIVIL ACTION NO 14 10148 RGS United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts 2 May 2014 Accessed 19 July 2014 Bindslev Joachim Claushoj New wind for Danish project in the US in Danish EnergiWatch 6 May 2014 Accessed 19 July 2014 Archived on 19 July 2014 Patrick says Healey is blocking state s renewable energy growth Cape Cod Today Sep 9 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 24 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Renewable Energy Revolution Cape Cod Today Archived from the original on 2006 10 24 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Philip Bump July 17 2012 Mitt Romney may have a few million reasons to oppose wind power Grist Magazine Retrieved 2013 07 11 Murray James 2012 08 02 Mitt Romney confirms he would end US wind power subsidies the Guardian Retrieved 2022 06 18 Rivals split on environmental issues Archived from the original on May 21 2014 Jones Jason August 7 2007 Nantucket The Daily Show Retrieved 2009 05 12 Corcoran Sean Sean Corcoran s Cape Wind Blog WCAI Cape and Islands NPR Station Whitcomb Robert Wendy M Williams Robert F Whitcomb May 2007 Cape Wind Money Celebrity Class Politics and the Battle for Our Energy Future on Nantucket Sound Public Affairs p 326 ISBN 978 1 58648 397 5 a b c d e MA Civil Society Institute Newton Survey Leadership on Cape Wind Other Clean Energy Solutions to Global Warming Seen as Path to New Massachusetts Miracle Archived from the original on 2009 02 09 Retrieved 2020 02 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Civil Society Institute permanent dead link Civil Society Institute website Cape Wind Wins 87 of Vote in Ballot Question Cape Wind Associates November 6 2008 Archived from the original on 2011 07 22 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Cape Cod Chamber Poll Finds 55 Opposed to Controversial Cape Wind Project Wirzbicki Alan September 27 2010 In poll edge goes to sales tax cut The Boston Globe Walker So whom do you believe Cape Cod Today Retrieved 2012 08 13 dead link Massachusetts residents strongly prefer wind solar and gas over oil coal and nuclear power Mass Inc Polling Group Retrieved 2012 08 12 Support for Cape Wind Project Has Collapsed Since 2007 New England Ratepayers Association Archived from the original on 2016 05 19 Retrieved 2015 05 08 Daley Beth October 10 2010 Cape Wind backers blew right by cost The Boston Globe Juliano Nick House passes 34B energy water spending bill Environmental and energy news 11 July 2014 Accessed 19 July 2014 Archived on 19 July 2014 Johansen Mathias Orsborg American politicians tease Cape Wind in Danish EnergiWatch 18 July 2014 Accessed 19 July 2014 Archived on 19 July 2014 Buzzards Bay Wind Farm Proposed Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Boston com website May 24 2006 Proposed Wind Farms in Buzzards Bay Archived April 22 2014 at the Wayback Machine BuzzardsBay org website Further reading editCichon Meg Offshore Wind Updates Cape Wind Financing Deepwater Proposal Massive UK Project Approvals RenewableEnergyWorld com website March 27 2014 Handwerk Brian Cape Wind Deadline Headwinds for Offshore Turbines National Geographic website December 5 2013 Seelyefeb Katharine Q Funds and New Timetable for Offshore Wind Farm in Massachusetts The New York Times February 26 2014 External links editOfficial website archived February 2 2017 Cape Wind overview by Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Map showing transportation context Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cape Wind amp oldid 1209996456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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