The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
The United States’ Department of Interior, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is the lead federal permitting agency for offshore wind. In 2015, Vineyard Wind through a competitive process, obtained the OCS-A-0501 lease area in federal waters south of Martha’s Vineyard and approximately 34 miles south of the Cape Cod mainland. In December 2017, a detailed project proposal for building Vineyard Wind 1, an 800-megawatt project, was submitted to BOEM. This Construction and Operations Plan (COP) and other documents, including visual simulations and public hearing materials can be found on BOEM’s webpage for the Vineyard Wind 1 project.
In March 2018, BOEM issued a Notice of Intent to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement which triggered a 30-day public comment period and five public meetings held in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
In December 2018, BOEM released its initial review in the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) and opened another public comment period. The purpose of the draft is to ensure the technical accuracy of all aspects review and to offer an opportunity for the public to comment. In February 2019, BOEM held a series of public meetings on Cape Cod, Nantucket, Martha’s Vineyard, in New Bedford, Massachusetts and in Narraganset, Rhode Island. In Summer 2019, BOEM announced they planned to delay a decision on Vineyard Wind 1 to conduct a cumulative impact review of future offshore wind developments. The Supplement to the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) was issued the following year in June 2020. A series of five virtual public meetings were held about the SEIS and over 29,000 public comments were submitted, overwhelmingly in support of moving forward with Vineyard Wind 1 and future offshore wind projects.