The project is jointly owned by
Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners and
Iberdrola, through a subsidiary of
Avangrid Renewables.
GE Offshore Wind (a subsidiary of
GE Wind Energy based in Europe) is supplying the 62 turbines. Windar Renovables is building the foundations. Nexans Group &
Prysmian Group is providing cabling. Two independent
submarine power cables run from an offshore 220 kV transformer about 15 miles south of the southeast corner of Martha's Vineyard, to Covell's Beach in
Centerville in
Barnstable on
Cape Cod about 34 miles (some 55 km) away. They feed into the 115 kV
grid at Barnstable Switching Station owned by
Eversource. The
Port of New Bedford has been used as a staging area for the project.
DEME is handling some construction and installation logistics. The
vessels used must comply with the
Jones Act, so feeder barges transport components from port to site.
Salem Harbor has also been developed as an
offshore wind port in conjunction with the project. During construction a
bubble curtain from
Thayer Mahan, Inc. is being deployed. A final
environmental impact statement (FEIS) was released in March 2021. Approval was delayed during the term of U.S.
president Donald Trump, due to concerns regarding fishing and safety. The permission was fast-tracked after
Joe Biden took office. A total of $2.3 billion in project funding was secured in October 2021. The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance representing fishing interests filed a federal lawsuit several months later disputing the approval, and a group of Nantucket residents did so in January 2023. Solar competitor Allco Renewable Energy also filed suit. Construction proceeded despite the lawsuits. Electricity from the first turbines began flowing on January 2, 2024, with the final turbines expected to be installed by the end 2024. The developers have agreed to suspend construction during
right whale activity in the area, and
University of New Hampshire monitors their
sounds. The project is expected to both reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and reduce electricity costs for Massachusetts consumers. The wind farm has secured 20-year contracts to sell the power it produces for a fixed 20-year price of $0.09/kWh and has agreed to provide a total of $15 million for a fund to provide battery storage in low-income communities. Six beaches on the island of
Nantucket were closed after a wind-turbine blade from the offshore wind farm broke apart on July 13, 2024, sending fiberglass shards into the Atlantic Ocean and onto the nearby coast. GE
Vernova said the cause of the blade failure was a manufacturing defect involving "insufficient bonding" and a failure of the factory's quality control to catch the issue. GE
Vernova inspected more than 100 other blades, and removed blades from at least two turbines due to finding defects. The federal government ordered the project to stop producing power as a result of the incident, with wind turbine operation only restarting in January 2025. In order to reduce nighttime visual impact, the red warning lights on the top of the towers are only turned on when radar detects an approaching aircraft. In September 2025, Nantucket residents complained this system was malfunctioning. == Development timeline ==