Oak Bluffs harbor at dusk on Saturday. On Friday there were scattered power outages after one of the undersea cables to the Vineyard failed.
Tim Johnson

Eversource Brings in Backup After Cable Failure

Rolling blackouts and temporary power outages experienced across the Island last weekend were caused by an undersea cable failure, according to Eversource.

Rolling blackouts and temporary power outages experienced across the Island last weekend were caused by an undersea cable failure, according to Eversource, with the utility planning to bring 15 backup generators to Island as it conducts repairs.

The cable experienced a "fault" on Friday around 5:00 p.m., Eversource confirmed, with the extraction of the cable and its repairs expected to take two months or longer, just as the Island reaches its peak energy usage rates at the height of summer.

In a letter to Island public safety officials and provided to the Gazette, Eversource community relations and economic development director Ronit Goldstein explained the power outages, which were mainly focused in Edgartown but felt in other Island towns as well.

“One of the submarine cables serving Martha’s Vineyard faulted on Friday, July 16, at 5:14 p.m., and we will be making necessary repairs over the coming weeks,” Ms. Goldstein wrote. “Through a combination of a backup generator already on Martha’s Vineyard coming online and our remote system operators using distribution automation technology like smart switches to reroute power from other circuits, all approximately 2,250 customers who briefly lost power were restored in fewer than five minutes.”

New England’s largest utility, Eversource provides power to the Island through four undersea cables that run between a switching station on Cape Cod and Martha’s Vineyard.

The company operates a substation off the Edgartown-Vineyard Haven Road in Vineyard Haven.

The four undersea cables are supplemented by five diesel-powered backup generators that kick-in when the Island experiences ballooning energy demands during the summer. The utility recently cancelled a plan to replace the generators with an expansive battery-powered storage facility in Oak Bluffs, citing increased cost estimations and an increase in expected on-Island energy demand.

The utility instead hopes to install a fifth undersea cable to meet the Island's expected energy demand through 2030, according to project updates filed on the utility's website.

Meanwhile, the utility plans to bring temporary backup generators to the Island while it conducts repairs to the undersea cable. The letter did not elaborate on what caused the failure.

“To help ensure reliability for residents, businesses and visitors while we make the necessary repairs to the submarine cable, we are taking the extra precaution of bringing 15 extra backup generators to Martha’s Vineyard,” Ms. Goldstein wrote. “These extra generators will be able to provide 28 MW of back-up generation to the Island if needed, and will be strategically placed at the Tisbury landfill, near our Vineyard Haven substation and near the Oak Bluffs DPW facility.”

In a follow-up email with the Gazette, Eversource spokesman William Hinkle said in a statement that cable repairs, which involve intricate logistics, divers and a barge, will take an expected eight to 10 weeks. The utility had not yet identified where the fault on the cable occurred.

"We are currently assessing the location of the fault, which could be along the cable or at an existing splice. There are many moving pieces as we continue to work toward making the necessary repairs as quickly as safely possible, which we believe could be complete in 8-10 weeks weather permitting," Mr. Hinkle wrote. "Next steps include bringing in a diver to further inspect the cable and pinpoint the fault location, and eventually a barge to pull the cable up to make repairs. The logistics for both of these are still being finalized."

The utlity is the sole energy provider for the Island, which experiences a dramatic population increase during the peak summer months. Mr. Hinkle said in the statement Tuesday that Eversource would be able to meet current summer demand despite the cable failure through a combination of shifting loads on active circuits and the back-up generators, as well as existing permanent energy generation on the Island. 

"We are confident there is enough capacity to ensure reliability for our customers on the island – including on the hotter days we can expect to see as the summer continues," Mr. Hinkle said. "This will require constant planning and refining, and precisely how that load is balanced using these options will be dependent on conditions like the weather and specific spots of demand at any given time."

Edgartown town administrator James Hagerty read the letter at a meeting of the Edgartown select board on Monday afternoon. He added that an issue involving a loss of AT&T cell phone service over the weekend was still being investigated.

“We’re still reaching out from AT&T to find out what the situation with that was, because we lost cell phone service concurrent with power service, which could be a major issue in the event of an emergency,” Mr. Hagerty said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 15:06

Permalink

Jim Edgartown

More solar panels please!!! Electric cars green energy! Electric lawn mowers !!!

Carl Oak Bluffs

The solution isn't to consume more electricity, but less. I haven't seen any solar-powered Tesla chargers or lawn mower charging stations on the Island, did I miss something?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 15:37

Permalink

T Bone Oak Bluffs

It's amazing such a major issue was tackled so quickly. I'm usually quick to criticize Eversource but kudos on their response during peak season.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 17:19

Permalink

Islander Edgartown

Yes, but the statement “ all approximately 2,250 customers who briefly lost power were restored in fewer than five minutes” is a total lie. Didn’t happen for me.

Why can’t companies simply tell the truth?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 18:30

Permalink

David Chilmark

ATT internet was really bad in the Quitsa area last week. Two or three bars on the phone and no data connection.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 18:38

Permalink

Lorraine Edgartown

No, it was not restored in five minutes. Mine kept going on and off, hideously bad on appliances and electronics, and it was on and off and on and off. Please, just keep it off for a while, not that continual recycling, things kept going on and off and ringing tones and printers adjusting and it drives me around the bend. And, the advice to unplug things to avoid the surge after the power is restored, I think not. It would take me crawling around on the floor, behind furniture, looking for plugins, as a lady of a certain age, not happening.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 20:29

Permalink

Mr. B Chilmark

Use less electricity. Turn things off. Set your AC at 72, if at all! Use the dryer at night. Turn off your pool heaters. Use less electricity.

Louise Edgartown

Good thoughts but take it another step. Running the dryer at night doesn't reduce electricity consumption, just distributes it to a time when there is less demand on the grid. When the sun is out, hang out your wash. Can't get more efficient solar power than that! When the sun goes down and things cool off, open the windows, turn off the AC (if you have it) and catch the breeze. And don't warm up the house again with heat coming off dryer! Don't get me started on pool heaters...we run the AC because it's too hot outside and heat up the pool because we want to cool off but not too much????

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/20/2021 - 21:19

Permalink

Tisbury guy

Think about how many truck loads of fuel on and off the island there may be to feed these generators. Next time you’re not able to get on a ferry be thankful we have energy.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 07/21/2021 - 13:22

Permalink

John W Tisbury

I suppose the two big old diesel generators still at power company building on Edgartown/VH road are not being used anymore. Wonder if they would still work in a pinch. Probably high emissions by today's standards, I remember when those critters were humming along, used to live near them.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 07/21/2021 - 15:02

Permalink

Martin Tisbury

Interesting that the company didn't notify authorities or customers as to the nature of the problem for three days.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 07/21/2021 - 20:38

Permalink

Corn Fused CHILMARK

Have any of you taken note of the all-new utility poles and all-new primary wires that Eversource has been installing since the fall of 2020?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 07/22/2021 - 12:00

Permalink

George Vineyard Haven

Can we all just be thankful for these workers who put themselves in harm's way everyday so we have electricity.I know I am.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.