Trump Allows Halted NY Offshore Wind Project to Resume Work

2 hours ago 1
 Eric Thayer/BloombergAn Ørsted wind turbine in the water off Block Island, Rhode Island, U.S., on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016. The installation of five 6-megawatt offshore-wind turbines at the Block Island project gives turbine supplier GE-Alstom first-mover advantage in the U.S. over its rivals Siemens and MHI-Vestas. Photographer: Eric Thayer/Bloomberg Photo by Eric Thayer /Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) — The Donald Trump administration has lifted an order that halted construction on a $5 billion wind energy project off the coast of New York.

Financial Post

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A unit of energy giant Equinor ASA was informed by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management that the project can resume, according to a statement late Monday. The project was paused in April when Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said the Biden administration had rushed its approvals. The head of Equinor met with US officials this month as part of a last-minute push to get it restarted.

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The move ends a weeks-long saga that had thrown not just the project into question but also placed serious doubts over the future of offshore wind in the US.

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Wind energy has been a frequent target of President Donald Trump, so it’s no big surprise that the industry has come under scrutiny. But while many expected that early-stage developments would be slowed or thwarted, it had come as a shock that the administration would stop a project in full swing.

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In its statement Monday, Equinor said it would provide an updated assessment of the project’s economics this quarter.

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Surprise project halting

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The project, called Empire 1, was fully permitted and slated to start commercial operation in 2027. Its 54 turbines were designed to power 500,000 homes.

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Just a few years ago, the US was seen as one of the most attractive growth markets for European energy companies looking to expand a technology developed in the North Sea. Now, soaring costs paired with political animosity have put the outlook for the US sector in doubt.

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It’s a sharp reversal from the Biden administration, which had vowed to develop some 30 gigawatts of offshore wind in the US by 2030, a policy that led to billions of dollars of investment in projects and the supply chains needed to deliver them. States on the US East Coast had seen the wind farms at sea as a key way to boost much-needed power supply growth as well as help reach climate goals.

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Molly Morris, president of Equinor Renewables Americas, said in a May 12 interview with Bloomberg News that the administration’s moves on the Empire project represent something bigger than impact on the company or even offshore wind.

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“It’s about honoring contracts and financial investments made in the US,” she said. “They are setting a dangerous precedent by stopping a project in mid-execution.”

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—With assistance from Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Michelle Ma.

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