The new underwater cables will help shore up the Island's power grid, Eversource and Island experts said.
Maria Thibodeau

Eversource to Begin Major Underwater Cable Project

<p>The utility giant is positioned this fall to begin work on a project that will run two new 23-kilovolt power cables to Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard, eliminating the need for diesel generators.</p>

Heeding calls for an expansion of the Island’s aging energy infrastructure, utility giant Eversource is positioned this fall to begin work on a major project that will run two new 23-kilovolt power cables to Martha’s Vineyard.

The project, which will replace one of the four undersea cables that connect the Island to the mainland as well as add a fifth, aims to extend the relevancy of the Island’s power grid as population continues to grow and planners look toward a greener future.

“You’ll have two new cables and you’ll net one additional cable,” Eversourse spokesperson Christopher McKinnon told the Gazette in a recent phone call.

Electricity on Martha’s Vineyard is currently provided through four submarine power cables; three that run from a switching station in Falmouth to West Chop, and one that runs to East Chop. The project will replace a 36-year-old cable running to West Chop, which failed last summer, and run a new cable under the Vineyard Sound to East Chop near the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital. The cables will be 6.1 miles long, according to Eversource’s description of the project.

Initial work on the project is slated to begin in Falmouth this fall, and the two cables are expected to be in service by the end of 2024. Mr. McKinnon told the Gazette that a final cost is unclear, but said the company can recover costs from ratepayers if the state Department of Public Utilities deems the system upgrades prudent. He estimated work would begin in the spring on the Vineyard, although a few final permitting hurdles remain.

The project will also eliminate five 12.5-megawatt diesel generators in Vineyard Haven used to supplement the Island’s energy needs during the peak months of summer, bolstering and expanding an aging Island energy infrastructure that has been stretched to its limits.

“This isn’t what you would call a short-term fix,” Mr. McKinnon said. “This is a long-term reliability project.”

The new cables act as a replacement for a large-scale battery storage project that was scrapped by Eversource after significant advocacy work from Island energy and climate experts, who felt the proposed facility fell short of the Island’s growing electrificiation needs. A cable failure last summer also added to concerns from Island energy planners. 

“They realized that that battery system was not going to get them as far as they expected,” said Martha’s Vineyard Commission member Ben Robinson.

Mr. Robinson chairs the commission’s climate action task force, which worked with Eversource to alter plans from the battery storage facility to a more comprehensive upgrade to the Island’s energy infrastructure.

“We’re going to need more electricity as we transition off of fossil fuels,” Mr. Robinson said. “We realized Eversource was underestimating where we were going to be.”

Whereas the battery system would have helped wean the Island off the existing generators which burn hundreds of gallons of fuel each year, the new cables will provide enough power to eliminate use of the generators entirely.

“We should be able to get into the 2030 decade with the finished cables,” Mr. Robinson said.

By replacing an aging cable and adding a new one, Mr. Robinson said both of the new cables should expand the amount of energy available to the Island.

“They’re not sending full energy through that [existing] cable,” Mr. Robinson said. “So we’re essentially going to get two new cables.”

While the Island waits for the new cables to be implemented, the five existing generators in Vineyard Haven will continue to provide supplementary power to Martha’s Vineyard.

“We’ve got at least two or three years that we’re going to have to manage,” Mr. Robinson said.

But Island energy experts remain optimistic as plans to modernize the power grid begin to materialize. Mr. Robinson said the Island’s relationship with Eversource has grown stronger in recent years, and MVC energy planner Kate Warner has taken early steps to build an Eversource working committee including energy experts and representatives from all six Island towns.

“This group is made to help Eversource come up with a strategic plan for the Vineyard,” Ms. Warner told the Gazette.

Still, experts said the Island’s energy grid has a long road ahead. Mr. Robinson said demand for energy on the Island will likely continue to grow, and conversations around emergency infrastructure for storms and other events are only just starting to take shape.

“There’s a lot of planning ahead for our grid on the Island,” Mr. Robinson said.

He said he hopes that Eversource will take an interest in the Island as a trial space for infrastructure like solar power and a backup grid.

“We’re happy that Eversource sees the Vineyard as a testing ground,” Mr. Robinson said. “We’ve been trying to build that relationship.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/13/2022 - 09:07

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Susan VH

I live in Vineyard Haven, I hear the diesel generators more and more over the years. In particular this summer. We have such a demand on the island for energy, with Electric Vehicles, more housing being built we will need another line.
I installed solar panels 5 years ago was very impressed with the results, lately I see my demand for power growing and the panels loosing there kW. Maybe time for a windmill…
Or a bike, I can’t afford the gas prices or the food prices for that mater.

Jean OB

Susan I feel your pain…. I can’t afford solar panels or an electric car…. I go off Island once a month to shop market basket. I can’t afford Cronigs prices…. And I live Steve B. He does so much for the community, only so much he can do
Why have things doubled in price? Groceries? Fuel? I just don’t get it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/13/2022 - 10:42

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josh parker Tisbury

Wouldn't this be the perfect time to also bring fiber so we can have FIOS so Comcast could have some real competition?

Islander Too

Yes!

My monthly Comcast bill is three or four times my monthly gasoline bill.
Hate them. @@
Plus, you cannot even call them up on the telephone but have to drive over to airport---wasting gas---if you need customer service.
Hate Comcast.

Lorraine Edgartown

Josh, I agree completely. We need at least one alternative besides our own dish and satellite, which is not allowed in many areas now. FIOS FIOS FIOS, please. Right now, Comcast is a monopoly and the service is just terrible. Many people, particularly the elderly, cannot run all over God's half acre for service and many elderly are housebound...please, some competition. I know a number of elderly people and they consider the internet a lifeline of sorts so as not to feel, and be, isolated. And in the days ahead Telehealth Medicine will be used more often. So, we truly do need a viable alternative to Comcast.

Jack Dunk Chilmark

its time for the island of martha's vineyard to work with ripple fiber to build out their community owned fiber optic broadband ISP network instead of FIOS similar to what the west Boylston municipal light plant in west Boylston, MA is doing out in central Massachusetts because Verizon is constantly refusing to expand fios to all of Martha's vineyard

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/13/2022 - 15:59

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Eric Vineyard Haven

I hear the diesel generators all summer a low vibration which travels through all structures, simple physics the lower the frequency the greater the penetration. That is why you hear the bass being played loud in cars as they pass your house, bass is low frequency therefore your home walls are penetrated by the sound waves which are vibrations one in the same. The new cables cannot be installed soon enough it is my feverent hope that all government entities will expedite the installation. Please nobody showing up with a fork unless it is a tuning fork, we need this upgrade if you were forced by location to suffer through all night vibrations caused by the generators in your home you to would be asking when, when when will relief come.

Vibration sensitive

Thanks for that explanation of the vibration.@@
Do you reckon this can reach Main Street, VH?@@
People are not all equally sensitive to this low-level vibration/hum. Which can actually be amplified by the walls of a building so that it is more noticeable on an upper floor than the ground floor or in the basement.@@

Recall that this type of vibration is the ultimate reason that the wind turbines installed in Falmouth were finally dismantled about a month ago.@@

It is also the reason that many residents in Vinalhaven, Maine, are sorry they ever supported the erection of wind turbines on that island.@@
When it comes to renewable energy there is a strong impulse to bury criticism and bad news and just readjust the rose-colored glasses.@@
That is a poor choice: The bad news generally comes back to haunt communities in the future, in the form of expensive legal action.
As occurred in both Falmouth and Vinalhaven.

Mike VH

I live 4-5 miles away from the generators they are running more than ever… we need the line asap….
We need power my solar panels are not cutting it in the winter months

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/13/2022 - 17:14

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Islander Too

"He said he hopes that Eversource will take an interest in the Island as a trial space for infrastructure like solar power and a backup grid."

While you are testing and trialing, I suggest leaving the diesel generators in place.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 10/14/2022 - 07:35

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Harriet West Tisbury

Is this why our electric bills have sky rocketed? And will continue to sky rocket? When will the EPA come down here to protect the natural, livable environment for the endangered species called “Locals”?

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