New England states bid for up to $1.82bn in US offshore wind and regional grid funds
Proposals aim to integrate 4.5GW of offshore wind and other renewables and include collaboration with New York for interregional transmission
A consortium of six New England states has submitted bids for up to $1.82bn in funding in round 2 of Grid Innovation Programme (GIP) for offshore wind and interregional transmission sponsored by the US Department of Energy (DoE).
GIP is part of DoE’s $10.5bn Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships initiative to support projects that enhance transmission “reliability and resilience using advanced technologies and innovative partnerships and approaches.” Funding is available through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021.
The first proposal, submitted by energy regulators from Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, was for new and upgraded power lines and points of interconnection to integrate 4.5GW of offshore wind electricity to the grid of New England Independent System Operator (ISO-NE).
“The Northeast region offers DoE two compelling applications, highlighting our strong regional ties,” said Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources (DER) commissioner Elizabeth Mahony.
“As we work to achieve our climate goals and increase the generation of renewable energy in the region, we need to invest in our transmission system and storage resources to deliver clean energy to our residents and businesses.”
Deadline for submission to GIP was 17 April. Last October DoE awarded $1.4bn to eight projects through its first GIP round.
Up to $1.82bn in funding is available through the second GIP round. A winning award would help “offset costs for transmission and storage infrastructure projects that support clean energy goals, enhance operational flexibility, grid reliability, and resilience during extreme weather events and periods of system stress,” said Mass DER.
"The funding would be transformational for the development of renewable energy and grid resiliency across the entire Northeast region," said Massachusetts Director of Federal Funds and Infrastructure Quentin Palfrey.