Trump Admin Orders Offshore Wind Farm
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Leaders in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island are racing to save offshore wind farms targeted by the president.
Like any industry, wind energy has had its good and bad years. But 2025 may be one of the worst: a toxic stew of major policy reversals, corporate upheaval and sub‑par generation in key markets.
In a major blow to the offshore wind industry, President Donald Trump’s administration suspended federal leases for all large projects currently under construction. The move threatens thousands of jobs and efforts to rein in skyrocketing energy costs.
A federal judge vacated President Trump's executive memorandum that halted wind energy permits, ruling the action was arbitrary and capricious.
6hon MSN
Trump’s return brought stiff headwinds for clean energy. So why are advocates optimistic in 2026?
Dozens of energy developers, experts and politicians say there were some highs amid a lot of lows in a roller coaster year for clean energy as President Donald Trump worked to boost polluting fuels wh
A stop-work order by the Trump administration directs offshore wind developers to “suspend all ongoing activities” related to five large-scale projects under construction along the East Coast “for the next 90 days for reasons of national security.
A federal judge struck down President Donald Trump's wind energy ban after 17 states sued, calling the executive order "arbitrary and capricious."
In the battle over future of wind energy off the coast of Ocean City and elsewhere, Md. AG Anthony Brown has announced a legal victory. What to know.
The decision came after U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth issued a preliminary injunction in September against the Trump administration's stop-work order for the nearly $6 billion Revolution Wind project—a joint effort by Danish energy company Orsted and partners BlackRock and Skyborn Renewables.
The short-term ban that expires Jan. 7 put the brakes on the Harvest Hills wind project that was launched by Steelhead Americas. The Oregon-based energy company has been working for four years to possibly construct 45 wind turbines on private land near Colfax and south of Washington State Route 272.
Winds are projected to gust as high as 85 miles per hour around Colorado beginning Wednesday morning.