Donald Trump
Donald Trump arrives at Mar-a-Lago. REUTERS/Nathan Howard

While President Donald Trump’s administration on Monday again made its commitment to planet-wrecking fossil fuels clear, a Republican-appointed judge in Washington, DC dealt yet another blow to the Department of the Interior’s attacks on offshore wind power.

US District Judge Royce Lamberth, an appointee of former President Ronald Reagan, issued a preliminary injunction allowing the developer of the Sunrise Wind project off New York to resume construction during the court battle over the department’s legally dubious move to block this and four other wind farms along the East Coast under the guise of national security concerns.

Lamberth previously issued a similar ruling for Revolution Wind off Rhode Island—which, like Sunrise, is a project of the Danish company Ørsted. Other judges did so for Empire Wind off New York, Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind off Virginia, and Vineyard Wind off Massachusetts, meaning Monday’s decision was the fifth defeat for the administration.

Ørsted said in a Monday statement that the Sunrise “will resume construction work as soon as possible, with safety as the top priority, to deliver affordable, reliable power to the State of New York.” The company also pledged to “determine how it may be possible to work with the US administration to achieve an expeditious and durable resolution.”


Welcoming Lamberth’s decision as “a big win for New York workers, families, and our future,” Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul stressed that “it puts union workers back on the job, keeps billions in private investment in New York, and delivers the clean, reliable power our grid needs, especially as extreme weather becomes more frequent.”

Despite the series of defeats, the Big Oil-backed Trump administration intends to keep fighting the projects. As E&E News reported:

White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers reiterated in a response Monday that Trump has been clear that “wind energy is the scam of the century.”

“The Trump administration has paused the construction of all large-scale offshore wind projects because our number one priority is to put America First and protect the national security of the American people,” Rogers said. “The administration looks forward to ultimate victory on the issue.”

The Interior Department said it had no comment at this time due to pending litigation.

Still, advocates for wind energy and other efforts to address the fossil fuel-driven climate emergency are celebrating the courts’ consistent rejections of the Trump administration’s “abrupt attempt to halt construction on these fully permitted projects,” as Hillary Bright, executive director of the pro-wind group Turn Forward, put it Monday.

“Taken together, these five offshore wind projects represent nearly 6 gigawatts of new electricity now under construction along the East Coast, enough power to serve 2.5 million American homes and businesses,” she noted. “At a time when electricity demand is rising rapidly and grid reliability is under increasing strain, these projects represent critically needed utility-scale power sources that are making progress toward completion.”

“We hope the consistent outcomes in court bode well for the completion of these projects,” Bright said. “Energy experts and grid operators alike recognize that offshore wind is a critical reliability resource for densely populated coastal regions, particularly during periods of high demand. Delaying or obstructing these projects only increases the risk of higher costs and greater instability for ratepayers.”

“After five rulings and five clear outcomes, it is time to move past litigation-driven uncertainty and allow these projects to finish the job they were approved to do,” she argued. “Offshore wind strengthens American energy security, supports domestic manufacturing and construction jobs, and delivers reliable power where it is needed most. We need to leverage this resource, not hold it back.”

Sierra Club senior adviser Nancy Pyne similarly said that “the unilateral court victories are evidence of what we’ve known all along—Donald Trump has it out for offshore wind, but we aren’t giving up without a fight. Communities deserve a cleaner, cheaper, healthier future, and offshore wind will help us get there.”

“Despite the roadblocks Donald Trump has tried to throw up in an effort to bolster dirty fossil fuels, offshore wind will prevail,” she predicted. “We will continue to call for responsible and equitable offshore wind from coast to coast, as we fight for an affordable and reliable clean energy future for all.”

Allyson Samuell, a Sierra Club senior campaign representative in the state, highlighted that beyond the climate benefits of the project, “we are glad to see Sunrise Wind’s 800 workers, made up largely of local New Yorkers, get back to work.”

“Once constructed, Sunrise Wind will supply 600,000 local homes with affordable, reliable, renewable energy—this power is super needed and especially important during extreme cold snaps and winter storms like Storm Fern,” Samuell said in the wake of the dangerous weather. “Here in New York, South Fork has proven offshore wind works, now is the time to see Sunrise, and Empire Wind, come online too.”