Putting a stake in the ... water
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by Richard Maltzman,
Dave Shirley
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Date

Note: Image above from CapeCod Times article referenced below.
On August 1, 2013, there was an auction to sell rights to 164,000 acres of federal ocean area southwest of Martha’s Vineyard (an Island off the coast of Massachusetts – see map).
The winning bid went to Rhode Island-based developer Deepwater Wind New England LLC, for a total of $3.8 million. This now gives Deepwater Wind the right to develop wind energy projects in the highlighted area.
It’s pretty big news. From yesterday’s front page story in the Cape Cod Times, there is this quote from US Department of Interior Secretary Sally Jewell: "When you think about the enormous energy potential that Atlantic wind holds, this is a major milestone for our nation".
Also from that story:
Deepwater Wind plans to build a 200-turbine wind farm on the parcels as well as a transmission system from Long Island to Southeastern New England, company CEO Jeffrey Grybowski said.
The transmission system will allow the company to sell into two regional electrical systems as well as providing those systems with greater reliability and flexibility when moving power around to meet needs, he said.
The 200 turbines the company plans to use — each 6 megawatts — would have a capacity of about 1,200 megawatts and the total cost of the project would be about $5 billion, he said.
The estimated amount of power that would be produced is significantly smaller than the federal government's estimates for the area because Deepwater Wind does not plan to locate any turbines closer than 16 miles from the nearest shoreline, limiting the number of turbines, Grybowski said.
The project could be under construction by 2016 and operational as early as 2017, he said.
We bring this to your attention for several reasons:
1. It’s an example of a “Green By Definition” project (a Program, really, because it is a collection of projects which are better managed together)
· Our book, Green Project Management, defined projects along a spectrum, from those, like this one, which are geared specifically on renewable energy, saving species, reducing waste, and so on. We like to illustrate that as projects at various points along the spectrum make news.
2. The project already seems to have incorporated ‘lessons learned’ from its neighboring and pioneering wind project, Cape Wind, about which we have blogged many times before.
· Cape Wind, a 130-turbine project, has been greatly delayed for several reasons, one of which has been its closer proximity to the shore (though still in Nantucket Sound), and its conflict with a slew of stakeholders who have worked together in unexpected ways to delay the project.
3. From a very early review, and from admittedly limited information, the project team seems to have identified and analyzed stakeholders and seems to ready to deal with the risks (both threat and opportunity) that each brings to the table.
· From the story: The Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) still has concerns about offshore wind energy projects, said the tribe's historic preservation officer, Bettina Washington. "Now this is off where we live day to day all the time," she said about the leasing area's location southwest of the Gay Head Cliffs at the heart of the tribe's lands. In addition to concerns about the view from tribal lands, there are concerns about the impact on whales that use the area and on potential archaeological sites located on and below the sea floor, Washington said. Deepwater Wind officials have already been in contact with the tribe about a five-turbine project the company is planning off the coast of Block Island and would work with the tribe on any concerns it continues to have, Grybowski said. "They're a hugely important stakeholder in the process," he said. Although the tribe would prefer the turbines be located at least 21 miles offshore, Washington said archaeological concerns are being taken more seriously following the debate over Cape Wind and the areas farther offshore are preferable to Nantucket Sound.
As you can see, Grybowski and Deepwater Wind have done at least some of their PM homework. And that’s important. 1,000,000 homeowners may be soon counting on this program if they’re going to be able to reliably click on their TV sets to watch the Red Sox!
For a press release from Deepwater Wind, click on their logo below.

Posted
by
Richard Maltzman
on: August 02, 2013 02:45 PM |
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