The Trump administration has halted an offshore wind project in Rhode Island. ThuyTruongSpa 702

The Trump administration has issued an order to stop all activities of a wind energy project in Rhode Island, which could have supplied electricity to 350,000 homes. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has sent a letter to Ørsted, the Danish company operating the project, stating that the stop work order seeks to address concerns related to the protection of national security interests and prevention of interference with reasonable uses of the exclusive economic zone, the high seas, and the territorial seas. The Revolution Wind Project, a $1.5 billion plan approved under former President Biden, is 80 percent complete and projected to be finished by 2026. The Interior Department announced last month that it would conduct strict review processes for all wind and solar projects, including decisions on grants, environmental impact, and land leases.

The administration has launched a national security probe into imports of wind turbines, which remains unclear. Ørsted, the company operating the project, is investing in American energy generation, grid upgrades, port infrastructure, and a supply chain, including U.S. shipbuilding and manufacturing extending to more than 40 states. The project was approved in 2023 and had a 20-year power purchase agreement. When fully built, the project could have provided electricity to hundreds of thousands of homes in Rhode Island and Connecticut. In May, the Attorney General of Connecticut, William Tong, and 17 other AGs sued the administration over its attempts to restrict wind projects.

Revolution Wind is the third project halted by the Trump administration this year, following the reversed approval for the Lava Ridge Wind Project in Idaho and the Empire 1 Wind project off the coast of Long Island, N.Y.

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