New England wind farm construction to restart after court blocks Trump order to stop work

New England wind farm construction to restart after court blocks Trump order to stop work


Attendees during a media tour of the Revolution Wind construction hub at the Port of Providence in Providence, Rhode Island, US, on Thursday, June 13, 2024.

Adam Glanzman | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Danish renewable energy company Orsted will restart work “as soon as possible” on a wind farm off the coast of New England, after a federal judge on Monday blocked the Trump administration from enforcing a stop work order.

“Revolution Wind will resume impacted construction work as soon as possible, with safety as the top priority,” Orsted said in a statement Monday.

The judge’s decision is a setback for President Donald Trump’s effort to shut down the nascent offshore wind industry in the U.S.

The Interior Department had ordered Orsted on Aug. 22 to halt construction on Revolution Wind off the coast of Rhode Island and Connecticut. The project is fully permited and 80% complete. It would provide power for more than 350,000 homes.

Orsted and its partner Skyborn Renewables had asked the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to halt Interior’s stop-work order, arguing that it was aribtrary, capricious, unlawful and “issued in bad faith.”

While the judge granted the injunction request, a full opinion has yet to be filed.

Trump has targeted the wind power industry since his first day in office, when he banned new leases for offshore wind farms. But the industry had hoped that fully permitted wind projects, particularly those that are already under construciton, would be allowed to proceed.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said earlier this month that he is “taking a deep look” at five offshore wind projects in the U.S. that are under construction. Burgum made clear that Trump wants to shut down the offshore wind industry.

“Under this administration, there is not a future for offshore wind because it is too expensive and not reliable enough,” Burgum told an audience at the Gastech conference in Milan, Italy, on Sept. 11.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO



Source

Activist Irenic takes a stake in Integer. Here’s what could be next for the company
World

Activist Irenic takes a stake in Integer. Here’s what could be next for the company

Timon Schneider | SOPA Images | AP Company: Integer Holdings Corp (ITGR) Business: Integer Holdings Corporation is a medical device contract development and manufacturing company. Its brands include Greatbatch Medical and Lake Region Medical. The company’s Cardio & Vascular product line offers a range of components, subassemblies, and finished devices used in interventional cardiology, structural […]

Read More
Unshaken: Why Brazilian stocks have looked past the Venezuela attack
World

Unshaken: Why Brazilian stocks have looked past the Venezuela attack

While the U.S. military operation in Venezuela has spurred concerns around the world over international law violations, global financial markets have appeared unaffected by the developments , even stocks right next door in Latin America’s largest economy. Earlier this month, the U.S. conducted a large-scale attack on Venezuela, during which Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and […]

Read More
Discipline isn’t the most common habit among people with self-control, says bestselling author—here’s what is
World

Discipline isn’t the most common habit among people with self-control, says bestselling author—here’s what is

Many people think that if they’re determined enough — if they push themselves really hard — they’ll be able to create better habits. Those people are missing an important piece to the puzzle of self-control, according to James Clear, author of The New York Times bestselling book “Atomic Habits.” Even if you’re disciplined, you likely […]

Read More