The Boston Globe

SouthCoast backing out of wind farm plan

- By Jon Chesto GLOBE STAFF Jon Chesto can be reached at jon.chesto@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jonchesto.

The move comes ahead of the state’s largest auction yet for offshore wind. SouthCoast will try to rebid its project in the latest auction.

As anticipate­d, SouthCoast Wind has announced it will seek to terminate the utility contracts it needs to finance the constructi­on of a giant offshore wind farm south of Martha’s Vineyard, citing significan­t increases in the cost of the project.

The move follows Avangrid’s decision last fall to do the same thing with contracts for a similar project, dubbed Commonweal­th Wind, which was also proposed for waters south of the Vineyard. Industry insiders had expected SouthCoast Wind to follow, because its contracts are based on the same economics as Commonweal­th Wind’s. But until now, despite conceding similar cost concerns, SouthCoast Wind’s leaders avoided definitive­ly answering the question whether they would need to terminate their contracts too.

Regulatory pressure in Rhode Island, however, apparently forced SouthCoast’s hand. That state’s Energy Facilities Siting Board has been reviewing a proposed power line that SouthCoast (formerly known as Mayflower Wind) has planned through Portsmouth, R.I., for the project, with a hearing scheduled on June 12 to go over the project’s financial viability.

On Friday, SouthCoast informed the Rhode Island siting board that it has started discussion­s with Massachuse­tts officials and electric utilities about terminatin­g the wind farm’s power purchase agreements. The SouthCoast project would generate 1,200 megawatts, or enough power for more than one million homes and businesses.

Commonweal­th Wind and SouthCoast Wind backing out means the results of two of the three Massachuse­tts wind-energy auctions so far will be scrapped. Only the winner of the state’s first auction of wind-power contracts, Vineyard Wind, is moving forward. Constructi­on recently began on that project, a joint venture owned by Avangrid and Copenhagen Infrastruc­ture Partners, because its supplier agreements were largely in place before the huge spike in interest rates and other costs last year.

In May, the Healey administra­tion launched the state’s fourth round of offshore wind bidding, inviting developers to submit bids to collective­ly provide up to 3,600 megawatts — or more than 25 percent of the state’s annual electricit­y demand. This would be by far the largest auction yet of offshore wind contracts for Massachuse­tts. Bids are due early next year. Avangrid plans to rebid its Commonweal­th Wind project in this round, hoping for higher prices. Now it’s official that SouthCoast Wind — a joint venture between Shell and Ocean Winds, which is itself a joint venture owned by Engie and EDP Renewables — will try to do so as well.

In a statement, SouthCoast chief executive Francis Slingsby said the developer is grateful to the Healey administra­tion for creating enough room for a rebid of its project in the latest auction. He said even after factoring in potential tax incentives, SouthCoast couldn’t make the numbers work, and “terminatio­n, and payment of a financial penalty for terminatio­n, has become the prudent commercial course ... due to material and unforeseen supply chain and financing cost increases affecting the whole offshore wind industry.”

These auctions were originally set in motion by a state energy law passed in 2016 aimed at making Massachuse­tts more reliant on cleaner sources of electricit­y. State officials also hope that by sparking a new industry to life, offshore wind can bring economic developmen­t as well. Other states in the Northeast have since followed with their own auctions of longterm contracts to buy power, which the wind farm developers use to obtain financing for their multibilli­on-dollar projects.

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