The Trump administration is permitting work on a significant offshore wind challenge for New York to renew.
The developer, the Norwegian power firm Equinor, mentioned Monday it was advised by the federal Bureau of Ocean Vitality Administration that the stop-work order has been lifted for the Empire Wind challenge, permitting development to renew.
Work has been paused since Inside Secretary Doug Burgum final month directed the Bureau of Ocean Vitality Administration to halt development and overview the permits. Burgum mentioned on the time that it appeared former President Joe Biden’s administration had “rushed through” the approvals. Equinor spent seven years acquiring permits and has spent greater than $2.5 billion up to now on a challenge that was one-third full.
Equinor President and CEO Anders Opedal thanked President Donald Trump for permitting the challenge to maneuver ahead, saving about 1,500 development jobs and investments in U.S. power infrastructure. He additionally expressed appreciation to New York’s governor, New York Metropolis’s mayor, members of Congress and labor teams, in addition to Norwegian officers who labored to avoid wasting the challenge. The Norwegian authorities owns a majority stake in Equinor.
“We appreciate the fact that construction can now resume on Empire Wind, a project which underscores our commitment to deliver energy while supporting local economies and creating jobs,” Opedal mentioned in an announcement.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul mentioned it took numerous conversations with Equinor and White Home officers, and the involvement of labor and enterprise pursuits, to emphasise the challenge’s significance and get Empire Wind again on monitor. Equinor is constructing Empire Wind south of Lengthy Island to supply energy in 2026 for greater than 500,000 New York houses.
“New York’s financial future goes to be powered by plentiful, clear power that helps our houses and companies thrive. I fought to avoid wasting clear power jobs in New York — and we acquired it performed,” Hochul mentioned in an announcement Monday.
Trump has prioritized fossil fuels and moved towards renewable power since returning to the White Home. One among his first acts was ordering a pause of offshore wind lease gross sales in federal waters and the issuance of approvals, permits and loans for all wind initiatives. However the administration’s concentrating on of Empire Wind, a challenge already underway, took {that a} step additional.
White Home spokesperson Taylor Rogers mentioned in an announcement on Friday that whereas unleashing America’s power dominance, Trump “paused certain wind projects that are detrimental to our beloved wildlife including birds and whales.”
There aren’t any identified hyperlinks between giant whale deaths and ongoing offshore wind actions, in response to the Nationwide Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Whereas wind generators can pose a danger to birds, wildlife conservation organizations say they assist the accountable growth of offshore wind as a result of local weather change is a much bigger menace.
Equinor mentioned on Could 9 it might be compelled to desert Empire Wind inside days until the administration relented on its order that stopped development. Equinor was spending as much as $50 million per week and had 11 vessels on standby.
Equinor finalized the federal lease in March 2017, throughout Trump’s first time period. The federal authorities authorized the development and operations plan in February 2024.
Offshore wind advocates celebrated the choice. It’s a win for staff, the business and corporations in locations like Louisiana, South Carolina, and Pennsylvania, serving to to construct initiatives within the Northeast, the Oceantic Community mentioned in an announcement.
New York goals to acquire 70% of its electrical energy from renewable sources by 2030 and 9 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2035. New York is getting some wind energy from the nation’s first commercial-scale offshore wind farm, a 12-turbine wind farm referred to as South Fork that opened a yr in the past, operated by totally different firms east of Montauk Level, New York.