Court injunction allows construction to continue amid BOEM challenges.
Long Island leaders gathered in Melville Friday to call on the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to lift its lease suspension on Sunrise Wind, a project already 45% complete, to secure its economic benefits.
In a letter to Acting BOEM Director Matthew Giancona, the group emphasized the project’s benefits, including stabilizing energy prices, supporting union jobs and boosting the downstream supply chain. The group stressed the need to advance the project without further delays.
Sunrise Wind, under construction 30 miles off Montauk, is slated for operation next year and is expected to generate enough electricity to power 600,000 homes. The project has encountered obstacles following a recent BOEM suspension order, which developer Ørsted is challenging in court. A preliminary injunction currently allows construction to continue while the lawsuit proceeds.
“The LIA urges the federal government to rescind their suspension order immediately, and allow this job-creating project that supports a stable grid capable of accommodating future economic growth to make it to the finish line,” Matt Cohen, Long Island Association president and CEO, said, in a news release.
“The economic benefits to Long Island and New York are undeniable – and the LIA supports an all-of-the-above energy strategy that incorporates all potential sources into our portfolio so our region can be prosperous,” he added.
“Sunrise Wind is well on its way to being completed and has already undergone an extensive government approval process, and should continue as planned,” Lawrence Waldman, LIA chairman, said, in the news release. “In addition to the significant job creating and other economic benefits, it helps Long Island and New York integrate another source of energy into our portfolio, which is critical for a reliable and affordable grid.”
Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine said in the news release that Long Island leaders “respectfully request that the BOEM adhere to the court’s decision and allow this project to proceed. The Sunrise Project will provide much-needed alternative energy solutions … and has created hundreds of jobs for skilled laborers. We want to see this project move forward.”
Kyle Strober, executive director of Association for a Better Long Island, said in the news release that “Long Island’s unique geography positions it well to benefit from the tens of millions of dollars in economic activity and thousands of jobs this project represents. As Sunrise Wind moves forward, we must not only recognize its enormous economic and energy benefits but also sustain our support for its construction in a manner that underscores a unified alliance of public-private Long Island leadership.”
Terri Alessi-Miceli, president and CEO of HIA-LIA, stressed the importance of the project.
“This critical infrastructure project strengthens Long Island’s energy future while creating good-paying jobs and long-term economic benefits for our region,” she said in the news release. “Sunrise Wind represents a practical step toward diversifying our energy mix and investing in offshore wind in a way that supports reliability, sustainability, and continued growth for Long Island and New York State.”
Mike Florio, CEO of Long Island Builders Institute, said that projects “like Sunrise Wind are critical to Long Island’s future as we work to diversify our energy mix and invest in practical, reliable offshore wind infrastructure. Affordable and dependable energy is directly tied to housing production and the overall cost of living in our region. If we are serious about building more homes, supporting the workforce, and keeping Long Island competitive, we need energy solutions that are sustainable, scalable, and planned with growth in mind.”
Marc Herbst, executive director of the Long Island Contractors’ Association (LICA) agreed.
“This project represents a major opportunity to create good-paying union jobs, strengthen Long Island’s workforce, and deliver long-term economic benefits for our region,” he said in the news release. “Now is the time for Long Island’s business and labor leaders to keep the momentum going and continue advocating for the economic growth, local investment and job creation Sunrise Wind will bring to our communities.”
John Durso, president of the Long Island Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, said in the news release that region “cannot afford further delays to critical energy infrastructure. Lifting the stop work order allows Sunrise Wind to move forward delivering union jobs, strengthening our energy grid, and advancing the kind of real progress Long Island needs. After repeated attempts to disrupt this project, the court’s ruling is a much-needed win for Long Islanders.”
Ryan Stanton, executive director of the Long Island Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, said in the news release that the “court’s decision on Sunrise Wind is a win for Long Island and a win for the rule of law. This project delivers exactly what Long Island needs: power generation, energy resiliency, and thousands of good-paying union jobs. It has already proven its economic value, and this court decision reinforces [that critical] energy infrastructure must not be politicized.”
Matthew Aracich, president of The Building and Construction Trades Council of Nassau & Suffolk Counties, said in the news release that his organization offshore wind development represents “a critical investment in good-paying, union jobs and long-term economic stability for our region. Restarting the region’s projects has immediately put skilled tradespeople back to work, supporting thousands of positions in the construction, and manufacturing jobs that strengthen local supply chains. Labor believes we can grow our economy while protecting our environment, and offshore wind allows us to do both—creating union jobs here at home while advancing clean, reliable energy.”
Robert Fonti, chairman of the Suffolk County Alliance of Chambers, said in the news release that the project ”represents both an energy investment and an economic opportunity for Long Island. Our small businesses want to see projects that create jobs, support local contractors, and move our region forward responsibly.”
Federal judge grants injunction allowing Sunrise Wind to resume work
Ørsted‘s 924-megawatt project is located 30 miles off Montauk
Trump administration suspended five wind project leases in December
Project is nearly 45% complete and expected to power 600,000 homes
Sunrise Wind, the 924-megawatt offshore wind project that Ørsted is developing 30 miles off Montauk, can resume construction, after being granted a preliminary injunction Monday to overturn the federal government’s suspension order.
The $700 million Sunrise Wind now joins the other four offshore wind projects to win orders from the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to resume after the U.S. Department of the Interior suspended the leases of five offshore wind power projects on Dec. 22, citing a Pentagon complaint that the wind turbine blades would cause radar interference and create a national security risk.
President Trump has long railed against wind power, calling the turbines ugly and inefficient, a criticism that’s been echoed for offshore projects by Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, who is now running for governor with Trump’s endorsement. The move to suspend the wind projects was slammed by state and local officials, trade groups and organized labor, and the court injunctions to allow them to continue have been applauded.
U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand said the court decision allowing Sunrise Wind to immediately resume construction is a win for New York’s working families and the economy.
“As energy costs continue to soar, the Trump administration’s ridiculous attempts to halt this project would have killed good-paying jobs and raised energy costs on New Yorkers — all to score political points and benefit powerful special interests,” Gillibrand said in a written statement. “I will continue pushing back on the Trump administration’s brazen political attacks on New York that are raising costs and hurting families. New Yorkers should not be forced to pay more because of reckless and politically motivated interference by the Trump administration.”
Sunrise Wind is nearly 45 percent complete, and at the time of the lease suspension order, the project was expected to begin generating power as soon as October. The project is expected to provide enough energy to power about 600,000 homes.
In its court argument, Sunrise Wind claimed that the stop-work order was costing the project at least $1.25 million per day, and if the suspension lasted much longer, it could force cancellation of the project.
Empire Wind, a $5 billion wind power project off Long Island being developed by Equinor, won its court injunction on Jan. 15. The other three wind projects that can now resume include Revolution Wind, which is another Ørsted project off Rhode Island, Vineyard Wind for Massachusetts and Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind.
Empire Wind received a preliminary court injunction that allows construction to continue on its $5 billion wind project off Long Island.
The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia granted the injunction after Empire Offshore Wind LLC challenged the federal governments stoppage issued last month. The U.S. Department of the Interior suspended the leases of Empire Wind and four other offshore wind power projects, including Long Island’s Sunrise Wind on Dec. 22, citing a Pentagon complaint that the wind turbine blades would cause radar interference and create a national security risk.
Ørsted, the company behind Long Island’s Sunrise Wind project, announced last week it was also filing a court challenge to its lease suspension order from the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, to be followed by a motion for a preliminary injunction.
Empire filed its civil suit on Friday, Jan. 2 challenging the Department of the Interior’s order to suspend its project and sought a preliminary injunction to allow construction of the project, which it claims is 60 percent complete, while the litigation proceeds.
“Empire Wind will now focus on safely restarting construction activities that were halted during the suspension period,” Equinor, the company behind the Empire Wind project, said in a written statement. “In addition, the project will continue to engage with the U.S. government to ensure the safe, secure and responsible execution of its operations.”
Once completed in 2027, Empire Wind, being developed under contract with the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, is expected to supply enough power to electrify 500,000 homes. The project has created nearly 4,000 jobs within the offshore lease area and through its revitalization of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, according to the company.
“We just received word that a federal judge in Washington has sided with us and the company Equinor, and other companies who are providers of offshore wind,” Gov. Kathy Hochul said via email. “The developer Equinor sued because the Trump administration arbitrarily issued a stop work order on a project that had been underway, contemplated for over a decade as part of our [renewable] energy strategy.We’re going to continue doing what we have to do every single step of the way, but for now the wind turbines will be turning on.”
Matt Cohen, Long Island Association president and CEO expressed support for the Long Island wind projects: “Today’s federal court ruling lifting the stop work order on offshore wind projects is a win for New York’s economy and jobs, ensuring that Empire Wind already in development can continue building and will power Long Island with clean, reliable energy in the near future, and we urge the same outcome for Sunrise Wind.”
Regional leaders discuss offshore wind at LIA State of the Region event
Officials push an “all-of-the-above” strategy to meet energy needs
Does wind energy have a future on Long Island?
That was the question Matt Cohen, the president and CEO of the Long Island Association, posed at the organization’s State of the Region breakfast at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury on Friday.
About 1,200 local leaders gathered for the annual event, which included a discussion moderated by Cohen with New York State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman and Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine.
When it comes to generating energy, the LIA, Cohen said, supports an “all of the above approach,” which, according to the organization’s priorities, includes investing in clean energy transition.
The dialog comes just days after Empire Wind filed a lawsuit to allow its construction to continue once the Trump administration suspended its $5 billion wind power project off Long Island.
At the breakfast, Cohen asked Blakeman, who has the support of President Donald Trump, about his position on the stop-work orders.
“Residents of Nassau County do not want offshore wind turbines – they made that very clear,” Blakeman said. “We have a very robust commercial fishing industry. We have … one of the largest recreational boating communities in the United States. We have seen damage to marine life and [wind energy] is the most expensive form of energy generation.”
Still, Blakeman said, “I agree with the LIA. I think we should have an all of the above attitude toward cheap energy generation.” Blakeman pointed to the southern tier of New York “that has one of the largest deposits of natural gas in the United States,” and tapping into that, he said, “would make gas cheaper for all of us.”
As for Suffolk, “there is a future to finish Sunrise Wind,” Romaine said to a round of applause in the room. Sunrise Wind, which is 70 percent completed, he said, would supply wind from Montauk to Brookhaven Town.
Romaine pointed to the South Fork Wind Farm, which was “an extremely controversial project,” but “it got done, it’s producing power. Sunrise Wind is not controversial at all.” Still, he said, upon completion, he would “see how it affects the ocean.”
Romaine said he is working with Long Island Power Authority to tap into solar energy, especially at the Long Island Innovation Park at Hauppauge, and other industrial parks. “Imagine all those flat roofs” tapping into solar, he said, adding that he was working to announce a program that would provide incentives to adapt solar energy.
Still, he said, the region needs “all of the above. We have an energy deficit, and artificial intelligence is going to make a huge drain on our energy future. We want to be on the cutting edge. We need energy in all sources.”
Blakeman said that Empire Wind wouldn’t benefit the local community the way Sunrise Wind would. Also, he said he wasn’t against wind energy, and added that “there are many communities upstate that will welcome wind energy and wind farms.”
DiNapoli said that the emphasis on the region’s “growing energy needs” are absolutely on target.
Still he said, “Suffolk County was number one in the state” in a recent report on the regions that are vulnerable to severe weather incidents.
Climate change, he said, “is real,” and the region does need to “get off the reliance on fossil fuel.”
He added that leaders must “stay focused on that energy transition – it’s absolutely essential.”
Additional panel topics included further discussion about infrastructure, the environment, housing, education and affordability.
The breakfast also included opening remarks from U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer and closing remarks from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.
Hochul announced a five-year $3.75 billion commitment to support the state’s water infrastructure as part of her 2026 legislative agenda.
Both Hochul, a Democrat, and Blakeman, a Republican, are running for governor this year.
The morning started with the National Anthem sung by Jillian Cerrato, a 12 year-old who attends Usdan Summer Camp for the Arts.
Empire Offshore Wind files federal lawsuit challenging Interior Department stop-work order
Developer seeks injunction to continue construction during litigation
$5 billion Empire Wind project is already about 60% complete
Offshore wind project expected to power 500,000 homes and support nearly 4,000 jobs
Eleven days after the Trump administration suspended its $5 billion wind power project off Long Island, Empire Offshore Wind LLC has filed a lawsuit to allow its construction to continue.
Empire filed a civil suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Friday, Jan. 2 challenging the U.S. Department of the Interior‘s order to suspend its project. Empire is seeking a preliminary injunction to allow construction of the project while the litigation proceeds, according to a statement from Equinor, the company behind the Empire Wind project.
Equinor said the stop-work order is unlawful and threatens the progress of ongoing work with significant implications for the project, which it maintains is already 60 percent complete. The company said the injunction is necessary to “avoid additional commercial and financing impacts that are likely to occur should the order remain effective.”
Empire Wind and Sunrise Wind, located in the waters off Long Island, were two of five East Coast wind projects that received stop work notices from the Department of the Interior, as part of the Trump administration‘s ongoing assault on renewable clean energy.
This is the second time this year that the $5 billion Empire Wind project has been stopped by the federal government. It was halted in April by an order from Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, who claimed the Biden administration had rushed its approval, even though the lease for Empire Wind was approved in March 2017 during the first Trump administration. The project was restarted a month later the result of a compromise between the federal government and New York State to revive plans for the NESE gas pipeline project between Pennsylvania and New York that was cancelled five years ago, according to published reports.
Once completed in 2027, Empire Wind, being developed under contract with the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, is expected to supply enough power to electrify 500,000 homes. The project has created nearly 4,000 jobs within the offshore lease area and through its revitalization of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, according to the statement.
The reason cited for the federal government’s lease suspensions was that the Pentagon complained that the wind turbine blades would cause radar interference and create a national security risk. In a statement from Department of the Interior, the halting of the wind projects is aimed at providing federal agencies “time to work with leaseholders and state partners to assess the possibility of mitigating the national security risks posed by these projects.”
However, Equinor responded that Empire “has coordinated closely with numerous federal officials on national security reviews since it executed its lease for the project in 2017, including with the Department of War, and has complied with relevant national security related requirements identified as part of the regulatory process,” according to the statement.
Two major offshore wind power projects off Long Island have been stopped by the Trump administration, which suspended their leases on Monday.
Empire Wind and Sunrise Wind, located in the waters off Long Island, were two of five East Coast wind projects that received stop work notices from the U.S. Department of the Interior, as part of the Trump administration’s ongoing assault on renewable clean energy.
The reason cited for the lease suspensions was that the Pentagon complained that the wind turbine blades would cause radar interference and create a national security risk. In a statement from Department of the Interior, the halting of the wind projects is aimed at providing federal agencies “time to work with leaseholders and state partners to assess the possibility of mitigating the national security risks posed by these projects.”
This is the second time this year that the $5 billion Empire Wind project has been stopped by the federal government. It was halted in April by an order from Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, who claimed the Biden administration had rushed its approval, even though the lease for Empire Wind was approved in March 2017 during the first Trump administration. The project was restarted a month later the result of a compromise between the federal government and New York State to revive plans for the NESE gas pipeline project between Pennsylvania and New York that was cancelled five years ago, according to published reports.
President Trump has long railed against wind power, calling the turbines ugly and inefficient, a criticism that’s been echoed by Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, who is now running for governor with Trump’s endorsement.
Gov. Kathy Hochul bashed the halting of the wind projects. “The Trump administration will look for any excuse to continue its assault on clean energy — and the thousands of good-paying jobs these projects bring — but there is no credible justification for this stoppage,” Hochul said in a statement.
Equinor, the company behind Empire Wind, said the project is more than 60 percent complete.
“In total, dozens of vessels, around 1,000 people, and more than a hundred companies in the U.S. and globally have been working in coordination on the Empire Wind project,” the company said in a written statement. “The stop work order threatens the progress of these activities and without a swift solution there may be significant impact to the project.”
Once completed in 2027, Empire Wind is expected to supply enough power to electrify 500,000 homes. The $700 million Sunrise Wind project, being developed by Ørsted about 30 miles off Montauk, is projected to create enough energy to power 600,000 homes. Both projects combined have created thousands of jobs.
Along with Sunrise, Ørsted also had its Revolution Wind project stopped. That project off Rhode Island, had been halted by the Trump administration in August, before a federal judge lifted the ban.
“Revolution Wind and Sunrise Wind are both in advanced stages of construction and will be ready to deliver reliable, affordable power to American homes in 2026, with Revolution Wind expected to begin generating power in January,” said an Ørsted statement.
The company said it is “evaluating all options to resolve the matter expeditiously, together with its partners,” including “the evaluation of potential legal proceedings.”
The 90-day suspension of the leases can be extended by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
The move to suspend the wind projects has been slammed by state and local officials, trade groups and organized labor.
“Right in the midst of the holiday season, we learned that President Trump is once again pulling the rug out from under New York workers,” Hochul wrote in an op-ed published Tuesday by the Empire Report. “… The jobs building these wind farms aren’t just good union jobs that keep families afloat – they are also jobs that will create clean energy and keep energy costs down.”
Hochul added that the wind projects “reduce pressure on energy prices for families already stretched thin. And they anchor a robust offshore wind supply chain, from ports and manufacturers to electricians, ironworkers, and longshoremen who depend on these projects to keep working.”
LIPA‘s proposed 2026 budget projects a 3.3% drop in electric bills.
Plan includes $4.4B in operations and $1B in capital spending.
Budget supports offshore wind, battery storage, and grid upgrades.
Three public hearings planned before final board vote on Dec. 17.
At a time when costs for most everything else continue to rise, electric bills could be slightly lower for Long Island homeowners under the newly proposed Long Island Power Authority 2026 budget.
Following a meeting of its Board of Trustees on Thursday, LIPA announced that its proposed 2026 budget is projected to decrease the average residential customer electric bill by $6.53 or 3.3% compared with 2025 rates.
The proposed $4.4 billion operating and $1 billion capital plan is the first budget developed under LIPA’s five-year contract extension with PSEG Long Island, which “strengthens oversight, enhances cost controls, and reduces management fees by an estimated $17 million over the life of the agreement,” according to a LIPA statement.
“This budget lays the foundation for success in future years under our extended contract with PSEG Long Island,” Carrie Meek Gallagher, LIPA’s newly minted CEO, said in the statement. “By focusing on reliability, affordability, and increasingly clean energy, we’re maintaining a financially disciplined approach to operations while positioning LIPA to meet the challenges of the next decade with a stronger, more resilient grid.”
The proposed budget supports New York State’s energy goals, featuring offshore wind, battery energy storage and transmission upgrades; all of which are expected to deliver thousands of megawatts of carbon-free power. It also budgets for energy commodities, such as electricity, natural gas and fuel oil, projecting a $219 million decrease in power supply costs, according to the statement.
“Affordability remains central to LIPA’s mission,” LIPA Board Chair Tracey Edwards said in the statement. “While utilities across the nation are raising rates, LIPA continues to be an outlier – protecting ratepayers by holding the line on costs, maintaining reliability, and investing in a clean energy future for Long Island.”
David Lyons, interim president and COO of PSEG Long Island said: “PSEG Long Island is proud to be in partnership with LIPA to deliver cost savings to ratepayers while continuing to be the #1 overhead electric service provider in customer satisfaction and reliability in New York State.”
The LIPA board also approved “a temporary pause on disenrollments from its Household Assistance Rate Program” in which some 39,000 customers are enrolled and temporarily suspended service disconnections for low- to moderate-income customers affected by the ongoing federal government shutdown.
LIPA will hold three public hearings on the proposed budget: At 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 18 at the Rockaway YMCA in Arverne; at 10 a.m. on Monday, Nov. 24 at the H. Lee Dennison Building in Hauppauge; and at 6 p.m. the same day at LIPA headquarters at 333 Earle Ovington Blvd. in Uniondale.
More information on the proposed 2026 budget is available at lipa.org. The LIPA board will vote on a final budget on Wednesday, Dec. 17.
Key races in New Jersey, Virginia and Georgia made it clear that energy affordability was on the ballot this election day as Democrats who campaigned on the issue swept the field.
Candidates in the three states campaigned on tackling rising energy costs through renewables, such as wind and solar, or by supporting the Trump administration in promoting fossil fuels, such as oil, gas and coal.
Trump has said that ramping up the production of fossil fuels will “unleash American energy” and save taxpayers money. But residential electric bills have increased about 10% nationwide this year — from 15.9 cents per kilowatt hour in January to 17.6 cents at the end of August, according to the latest available data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
At the same time, wind and solar remain the least expensive form of new-build electricity generation, according to the financial advisory firm Lazard.
The race for New Jersey governor saw Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill face off against Republican Jack Ciattarelli after state residents saw a roughly 20% price spike in electricity rates this year driven by reduced supply and growing demand from data centers and a slow rollout of renewables, among other challenges.
Sherrill campaigned heavily on the issue, vowing to declare a state of emergency on utility costs on her first day in office and institute a utility rate freeze.
“Prices are spiking because of a huge power shortage — I’ll transform New Jersey’s energy picture to build new, cheaper, and cleaner energy generation, bring down families’ bills, and put the Garden State on track to hit our emissions and clean air goals,” Sherrill wrote in her campaign materials.
Ciattarelli, meanwhile, vowed to implement a state energy master plan fueled by natural gas, nuclear and solar power but not offshore wind, which he promised to ban. “I will cap property taxes for families and freeze them for seniors, while killing offshore wind farms and expanding safe and clean natural gas and nuclear to lower electricity rates, which are currently out of control,” he told the NJ Spotlight News.
Sherrill won the governor’s race with more than 56% of the vote.
Energy prices are spiking in the U.S., in part, because the Trump administration has been cutting funding for wind, solar and battery energy storage, according to Nick Abraham, senior state communications director with the nonprofit League of Conservation Voters. The administration also has moved to block some projects that were almost completed.
“These races were about energy costs and affordability, and there were two clear cases made by candidates on both sides,” Abraham said. “One side wanted to stick with the Trump agenda — trying to ban clean energy and focusing on fossil fuels — and one side was trying to lower costs and implement clean energy strategies. And the results speak for themselves.”
According to Lazard, the cost of utility-scale solar ranges from $38 to $78 per megawatt hour and offshore wind from $37 to $86 per megawatt hour.
That’s compared with $71 to $173 per megawatt hour for coal and $149 to $251 per megawatt hour for gas peaking plants, among fossil fuels.
The issue was also top-of-mind with voters in Virginia, who took to the polls in a governor’s race between Democrat Abigail Spanberger and Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. The state is now home to more than a third of all data centers worldwide.
Spanberger focused heavily on affordability in housing, healthcare and energy during her campaign and said she would expand and incentivize the development of solar energy projects, along with technologies such as fusion, geothermal and hydrogen.
“Specific to energy, we have to have more generation here on the ground in Virginia,” Spanberger said in an interview with CBS in Richmond, adding that the state is already leading the way with the largest offshore wind farm in the country. The 2.6-gigawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project is slated to produce enough clean energy to power up to 660,000 homes when completed in 2026.
Earle-Sears focused on an “all of the above” approach to energy generation including oil, natural gas and renewables, but also worked to remove the state from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which she described as an “energy tax” driving higher costs. She also promised to repeal the Virginia Clean Economy Act, a 2020 law that requires the state’s utilities to produce 100% renewable electricity by 2050.
Spanberger won the governor’s race with more than 57% of the vote.
Meanwhile, voters in Georgia also turned out in a race for two seats on their five-member Public Service Commission, which oversees the state’s utilities. The commission approved six utility bill rate hikes over the last two years.
Democratic challengers Peter Hubbard and Alicia Johnson won out over Republicans in Tuesday’s race with the largest statewide margins of victory by Democrats in more than 20 years, according to the Associated Press.
Their opponents, Republicans Tim Echols and Fitz Johnson, backed a rate freeze but also resorted to Trump-style attacks, with Echols stating at a campaign event that Johnson, a Black woman, wanted to “bring DEI and wokeness” to the Public Service Commission.
Policy experts said the races were not only a bellwether for the 2026 midterms, but a strong signal that Americans support the clean energy transition.
“Voters chose leaders who see clean energy as the path to long-term affordability and reliability,” said Frederick Bell, associate director for state climate policy at the Center for American Progress, a think tank.
The Trump administration halted construction on a nearly complete offshore wind project near Rhode Island as the White House continues to attack the battered U.S. offshore wind industry that scientists say is crucial to the urgent fight against climate change.
Danish wind farm developer Orsted says the Revolution Wind project is about 80% complete, with 45 out of its 65 turbines already installed.
Despite that progress — and the fact that the project had cleared years of federal and state reviews — the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued the order Friday, saying the federal government needs to review the project and “address concerns related to the protection of national security interests of the United States.”
It did not specify what the national security concerns are.
President Donald Trump has made sweeping strides to prioritize fossil fuels and hinder renewable energy projects. Trump recently called wind and solar power “THE SCAM OF THE CENTURY!” in a social media post and vowed not to approve wind or “farmer destroying Solar” projects. “The days of stupidity are over in the USA!!!” he wrote on his Truth Social site this week.
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee criticized the stop-work order and said he and Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont “will pursue every avenue to reverse the decision to halt work on Revolution Wind” in a post on X. Both governors are Democrats.
Construction on Revolution Wind began in 2023, and the project was expected to be fully operational next year. Orsted says it is evaluating the financial impact of stopping construction and is considering legal proceedings.
Revolution Wind is located more than 15 miles (24 kilometers) south of the Rhode Island coast, 32 miles (51 kilometers) southeast of the Connecticut coast and 12 miles (19 kilometers) southwest of Martha’s Vineyard. Rhode Island is already home to one offshore wind farm, the five-turbine Block Island Wind Farm.
Revolution Wind was expected to be Rhode Island and Connecticut’s first commercial-scale offshore wind farm, capable of powering more than 350,000 homes. The densely populated states have minimal space available for land-based energy projects, which is why the offshore wind project is considered crucial for the states to meet their climate goals.
“This arbitrary decision defies all logic and reason — Revolution Wind’s project was already well underway and employed hundreds of skilled tradesmen and women. This is a major setback for a critical project in Connecticut, and I will fight it,” Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat, said in a statement.
“Today, the U.S. has only one fully operational large-scale offshore wind project producing power. That is not enough to meet America’s rising energy needs. We need more energy of all types, including oil and gas, wind, and new and emerging technologies,” said Erik Milito, president of the National Ocean Industries Association, a group that supports offshore oil, gas and wind.
Green Oceans, a nonprofit that opposes the offshore wind industry, applauded the BOEM’s decision. “We are grateful that the Trump Administration and the federal government are taking meaningful action to preserve the fragile ocean environment off the coasts of Rhode Island and Massachusetts,” the nonprofit said in a statement.
This is the second major offshore wind project the White House has halted. Work was stopped on Empire Wind, a New York offshore wind project, but construction was allowed to resume after New York Sen. Chuck Schumer and Gov. Kathy Hochul, both Democrats, intervened.
“This administration has it exactly backwards. It’s trying to prop up clunky, polluting coal plants while doing all it can to halt the fastest growing energy sources of the future – solar and wind power,” said Kit Kennedy, managing director for the power division at Natural Resources Defense Council, in a statement. “Unfortunately, every American is paying the price for these misguided decisions.”
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A nearby offshore wind farm was already planned when Donald Trump purchased coastal land in northern Scotland to develop the Trump International Golf Links—a project he envisioned as an homage to his Scottish-American mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump.
“I am not thrilled. I want to see the ocean; I do not want to see windmills,” Trump told BBC News in May 2006. It was the first-known example of Trump’s years-long war against wind power.
It took another five years for the Aberdeen Offshore Wind Farm to initiate permitting and, in 2012 as the golf course was nearing its opening, Trump launched an all-out media and legal assault against the wind project—a campaign that proved unsuccessful. “Tourism will suffer and the beauty of your country is in jeopardy,” Trump warned in a 2012 advertisement.
Trump wrote in a 2013 Daily Mail article that he would fight “for as long as it takes—to hell if I have to—and spend as much as it takes to block this useless and grotesque blot on our heritage.” By the time he was first running for president in 2015, Trump had tweeted negatively about wind or “windmills” more than 130 times.
Much to Trump’s chagrin, the Scottish wind farm opened in 2018. But he’s carried that fight much more aggressively in his second term as U.S. president.
Upon his return to Scotland this July, he emphasized: “We will not allow a windmill to be built in the United States. They’re killing us”. Trump added Aug. 20 on Truth Social that he “will not approve” wind or solar projects. “The days of stupidity are over in the USA!!!” he posted.
While Trump may not prevent every new wind turbine installed in the U.S., he certainly is trying.
Apart from a rapid phasedown of tax credits for wind and solar projects in the One Big Beautiful Bill signed into law in July, the Trump administration has ramped up its attacks on wind—and solar—into a full-scale war, including all but banning new wind and solar projects on federal lands and waters, keeping wind turbines away from highways and railroads, investigating turbines for eagle deaths, and, most recently, making it harder for renewables to even qualify for the short-lived credits eliminated after 2027.
Potentially most onerously, wind or solar projects must now go through three levels of federal review, including personally by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, who said in August that “gargantuan, unreliable, intermittent energy projects hold America back from achieving U.S. energy dominance.” These secretary-level reviews include many proposed on private land. Earlier this month, the administration canceled the massive Lava Ridge Wind Project in Idaho, yanking permits approved last year.
While Trump has long despised wind turbines, he’s only made it a top political priority in 2025. More wind projects were built during Trump’s first term than during the Biden administration. It’s only now though that U.S. power demand is surging—thanks to the AI data center boom—and it’s happening just when renewable energy is being handicapped.
Average electricity bill costs are up 7% year over year as of May, according to the Department of Energy, and they’re projected to keep rising.
“It’s a triumph of polarization over pragmatism,” American Clean Power Association CEO Jason Grumet told Fortune. “What is mind-boggling is that, after eliminating the subsidies, the administration has then gone on the attack with federal mandates and buckets of red tape to actively oppose projects being built.”
Executive ‘double-cross’
The last-minute compromise in the “Big Beautiful Bill” focused on keeping the renewable energy tax credits in place for now—but quickly phasing them out.
To qualify, projects must break ground by July 4, 2026, or be completed by the end of 2027. The key is really on breaking ground by next summer because few started after July 2026 are likely to finish by year-end 2027.
As soon as the omnibus spending law was passed, the Trump administration went to work making it harder to qualify for the tax credits—specifically what counts as breaking ground. Those revised rules were finalized on Aug.15.
It used to be that developers only had to pay 5% of the costs up front to lock in the tax credits. Instead, the 5% rule is eliminated for all but small solar farms, requiring all others to demonstrate that “physical work of a significant nature” has begun on or off-site, such as foundation excavation.
Grumet calls it a “double-cross” to immediately change the rules after reaching a deal that was already tough on the clean power sector. “This is basically an ‘America Last’ energy policy,” he said.
The fear was the administration would change the rules even more dramatically, but some Republican senators—including John Curtis of Utah and Chuck Grassley of Iowa—threatened holds on confirming some Trump nominees until the rules were released. After all, most new wind and solar farms are being built in so-called red states.
Also troublesome for the industry are new foreign-sourcing rules that penalize projects for using Chinese parts in a renewables industry dominated by Chinese supply chains.
Other regulatory aspects are potentially worse for the industry too. For instance, Burgum’s Interior Department went a step further on Aug. 1 to also include “enhanced” reviews for power line transmission projects that are deemed to help enable wind or solar projects.
That order came days after the Energy Department revoked a loan guarantee for the 800-mile Grain Belt Express transmission project from Kansas to Indiana.
Christina Hayes, executive director of Americans for a Clean Energy Grid, told Fortune that the transmission policy move adds more “uncertainty” when the nation rapidly needs more power infrastructure, especially when power lines are agnostic to electricity generated by wind or coal burning.
“There’s no sorting hack for electrons. Once an electron is on the system, it is like all the other electrons,” Hayes said, proceeding to make a Harry Potter reference. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, you’re a Gryffindor electron, you’re a renewable electron, you’re Hufflepuff, you’re coal.’ That’s not how this works.”
Rising obstacles
Potentially the most insidious changes for wind and solar aren’t the outright policy revisions, but the behind-the-curtains roadblocks created: federal websites going dark, meetings canceled, phone calls repeatedly unanswered.
“In order to permit a project, you have to interact with the federal government,” Grumet said. “You’re a developer, and you’ve gone through your 63 of 64 steps, and suddenly you can’t get your final meeting. And now future permits are going to be politicized at the cabinet secretary level for everything from where you put a fence to how you create a road. It’s weaponizing bureaucracy to undermine American energy production.”
For instance, Hayes said Elon Musk’s DOGE cuts contributed to the Energy Department’s staffing for the Coordinated Interagency Transmission Authorizations and Permits Program (CITAP) shrinking from about 60 people to six—critical for transmission siting and permitting.
Grumet likened the process to going to the Department of Motor Vehicles in the 1950s-era Soviet Union. “The government is challenging enough when everyone is working towards solutions; it’s impossible when the government is working to create problems.”
All the false claims
Trump has repeatedly called “windmills” a green energy scam and accused them of killing birds and marine life. He’s even falsely said the noise can cause cancer. But mostly, he loathes wind turbines for their aesthetics.
On the other hand, air pollution from fossil fuels can be carcinogenic, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has found that oil pits cause three times more bird deaths than wind turbines, which were deemed responsible for fewer than 0.01% of human-caused bird fatalities.
Outside of, yes, cats, the leading cause of bird deaths is building and glass collisions, including Trump’s towers in New York and around the world. Trump’s Aberdeen golf complex also was built on sand dunes that housed multiple species of endangered birds.
“The American public sees past the idea that a wind blade is a carcinogen,” Grumet said. “The issue the president really focuses on is the aesthetics. That’s a matter of personal opinion if the president thinks that staring at a natural gas facility is a source of American beauty, and staring at a wind turbine is an assault on the landscape.”
So, why now? One, this Trump administration is more filled with partisan players who were prepared to hit the ground running. Two, the energy fight increasingly has become more politically biased.
“Between 2020 and 2024, I think the whole energy debate became more partisan, and wind power, in particular, got locked into the ‘us versus them’ imagination of the way America works,” Grumet said.
Yes, it’s a tough time for renewable energy in America. Fewer projects will come to fruition. The extent of that decline is unclear. But new natural gas-fired plants and nuclear facilities will take five to 10 years to build. Retiring coal plants will have their lives extended, but only temporarily. New power generation is needed more quickly, and renewables, especially solar power, will still fill most of the short-term gap—with or without tax credits.
“We are inexorably moving toward a more efficient, lower-carbon energy system,” Grumet said. “The president’s actions certainly could slow that down for a couple years, but the direction is not going to change.”
Local elected officials joined Governor Kathy Hochul and U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland in Southampton on Thursday to announce the completion of the South Fork Wind project.
With all of its 12 offshore wind turbines built and the installation delivering power, South Fork Wind becomes the first utility-scale offshore wind project in the U.S., according to a statement from Gov. Hochul’s office.
Once it reaches full capacity, the 130-megawatt wind installation, located about 35 miles off Montauk, will generate enough renewable energy to power some 70,000 homes. It aims to eliminate up to 6 million tons of carbon emissions over the life of the project, the equivalent of taking 60,000 cars off the road for the next 20 years, according to the statement.
First approved by the Long Island Power Authority Board of Trustees in 2017, South Fork Wind began construction in Feb. 2022, the project’s first monopile foundation was installed in June 2023 and its final turbine was installed last month.
“When I broke ground on the South Fork project, I made a promise to build a cleaner, greener future for all New Yorkers,” Hochul said in the statement. “I’m keeping to that promise and South Fork Wind is now delivering clean energy to tens of thousands of homes and businesses on Long Island. With more projects in the pipeline, this is just the beginning of New York’s offshore wind future and I look forward to continued partnership with the Biden administration and local leaders to build a clean and resilient energy grid.”
Several local firms were instrumental in the infrastructure for South Fork Wind. The underground duct bank system for South Fork Wind’s onshore transmission line was installed by Melville-based Haugland Energy Group and LS Cable installed and joined the onshore cables with support from Hauppauge-based Elecnor Hawkeye. Another Long Island firm, Bay Shore-based Roman Stone Construction, manufactured concrete mattresses to protect the undersea cables.
“I’m very proud that Long Island is leading the way towards our green energy future. The South Fork Wind project is the culmination of efforts by Governor Hochul, NYSERDA, Ørsted, and Eversource,” Building and Construction Trades Council of Nassau and Suffolk Counties President Matthew Aracich said in the statement. “This industry defining project, which was nation’s first industrial scale offshore wind project on the Eastern Seaboard, will continue to provide residual benefits for years to come. Long Island’s youth should expect to see new opportunities in the very near future through apprentice training programs. The building trades pipeline, leveraging the best career training possible, will continue to provide opportunities for family sustaining wages.”
Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine said that the project has made history in Suffolk County.
“Thanks to the leadership of Governor Hochul and our representatives in the federal government, we have been able to set an example for the rest of New York State on embracing new technologies and bringing wind-generated energy to an entire region while making utility costs more affordable for our residents,” he said in the statement. “It is a great achievement.”
Long Island Power Authority CEO Thomas Falcone agreed that the South Fork Wind completion is an historic achievement for the state and the nation.
“Under Governor Hochul’s leadership, LIPA is proud to be a partner in this landmark project, and we will continue to pursue our collective vision for a sustainable and resilient energy future that creates jobs, builds our economy, and protects our environment,” he said in the statement.
The installation of a substation foundation for the South Fork Wind project off the East End of Long Island has been hailed as a major milestone by government officials, union leaders and utility executives.
The installation of the first monopile foundation marks the start of the offshore installation phase of the 12-turbine, 130-megawatt wind farm, which will be the first completed offshore wind farm in federal waters, with operations beginning by the end of the year, according to Ørsted and Eversource, the companies behind the South Fork Wind project.
Once completed, the wind farm located about 35 miles off Montauk Point will generate enough energy to power about 70,000 homes, while eliminating up to 6 million tons of carbon emissions, the equivalent of taking 60,000 cars off the road annually over a 25-year period, according to a statement from Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office.
“New York is leading offshore wind development and building a green economy that will support hundreds of good-paying jobs and benefit generations to come,” Hochul said in the statement. “This progress on building the first utility-scale offshore wind project in the country cements New York as a national hub for the offshore wind industry.”
The South Fork Wind project was approved by the Long Island Power Authority in 2017, after a request-for-proposals process two years earlier.
“Today marks a significant step in New York’s clean energy journey and for LIPA’s commitment to ensure a sustainable and resilient future for our customers,” LIPA CEO Com Falcone said in the statement. “Years in the making, this project milestone signifies that our efforts are transforming from vision into reality. We are proud to be a part of this landmark project and will continue to lead and innovate in our pursuit of a sustainable future for Long Island and in the Rockaways.”
The South Fork Wind project is one of five offshore wind projects the state has in development, totaling more than 4,300 megawatts and generating enough energy to power more than 2.4 million homes. The projects are expected to bring a combined economic impact of $12.1 billion to the state, creating more than 6,800 jobs in project development, component manufacturing, installation, and operations and maintenance, according to the statement.
The state has set a goal of 9,000 megawatts of offshore wind power by 2035, which would account for around 30 percent of the state’s electricity needs, equivalent to powering 6 million homes and creating about 10,000 jobs.
New York local union members, including ironworkers, pile drivers, divers, operating engineers, electricians, laborers, and other members of the region’s building trades are supporting the work offshore as a result of the National Offshore Wind Agreement signed by Ørsted and Eversource and building trades unions in 2022.
“I’m tremendously excited and proud to see the first steel structure being constructed offshore. This is truly a momentous achievement that will help reduce emissions for Long Island,” Matthew Aracich, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Nassau and Suffolk Counties, said in the statement. “These turbines represent the first large-scale wind farm we’re building offshore, and they represent a huge leap forward in workforce development. Additionally, I would like to thank the hardworking skilled tradeswomen and tradesmen who are building these turbines each and every day.”
Executives from Ørsted and Eversource praised “the bold leadership” of the Biden-Harris and Hochul administrations for championing offshore wind power, and thanked local officials and other supporters of the project.
“As we reach a milestone nearly a decade in the making, we’re reflective of all those who have long championed this project in the East Hampton community, and beyond,” David Hardy, group EVP and CEO Americas at Ørsted, said in the statement.
Fred Zalcman, director of the New York Offshore Wind Alliance, said that the installation of the project’s first offshore wind components is the culmination of years of effort from civic leaders, state and federal officials, laborers, and private industry.
“The South Fork Wind Farm stands as a proof of concept to the significant environmental, economic and social benefits of this resource, and future generations will look back on this monumental event and thank those responsible for the South Fork Wind Farm for their perseverance, creativity, and vision in bringing this seminal project to fruition,” Zalcman said.
It’s an hour before dawn breaks over the North Sea. Aboard the KV Bergen, the officer of the watch is wide awake.
The 93-meter long Norwegian Navy Coast Guard vessel is on patrol, 50 miles out to sea. The sky is dark, the sea darker. But off the starboard bow, bright lights gleam through the rain and mist. Something huge and incongruous is looming out of the water, lit like a Christmas display.
“Troll A,” says Torgeir Standal, 49, the ship’s second in command, who is taking the watch on this bleak March morning.
It’s a gas platform — a big one.
When it was transported out to this desolate spot nearly 30 years ago, Troll A — stretching 472 meters from its seabed foundations to the tip of its drilling rig — became the tallest structure ever moved by people across the surface of the Earth. Last year, Troll, the gas field it taps into, provided 10 percent of the EU’s total supply of natural gas — heating homes, lighting streets, fueling industry.
“There are many platforms here,” says Standal, standing on the dark bridge of the Bergen, his face illuminated by the glow from the radar and satellite screens on his control panel. “And thousands of miles of pipeline underneath.”
And that’s why the Bergenhas come to this spot today.
In September 2022, an explosion on another undersea gas pipeline nearly 600 miles away shook the world. Despite three ongoing investigations, there is still no official answer to the question of who blew up the Nord Stream pipe. But the fact that it could happen at all triggered a Europe-wide alert.
The Norwegian Navy’s KV Bergen, seen in the background, after departing from the port of Bergen
Against a backdrop of growing confrontation with Moscow over its brutal invasion of Ukraine and its willingness to use energy as a weapon, the vulnerability of the undersea pipes and cables that deliver gas, electricity and data to the Continent — the vital arteries of comfortable, modern European life — has been starkly exposed.
In response, Norway, alongside NATO allies, increased naval patrols in the North Sea — an area vital for Europe’s energy security. The presence of the Bergen, day and night, in these unforgiving waters, is part of the effort to remain vigilant. The task of the men and women on board is to keep watch on behalf of Europe — and to stop the next Nord Stream attack before it happens.
The officers of the watch
But what are they looking for?
In recent weeks the Bergen has tracked the movements of a Russian military frigate through the North Sea — something that it has to do “several times every year,” says Kenneth Dyb, 47, the skippsjef, or commander of the ship.
The Russians have a right to sail through these seas out to the Atlantic, and it is very unlikely Moscow would be so brazen as to openly attack a gas platform or a pipeline. But, says Dyb, as his ship steams west to another gas and oil field, Oseberg, “it’s important to show that we are present. That we are watching.”
Recent reports that Russian naval ships — with their trackers turned off — were present near the site of the Nord Stream blasts in the months running up to the incident have reinforced the importance of having extra eyes on the water itself.
The Oseberg oil and gas field, 130 kilometers north-west of Bergen
Of course, the gas didn’t come for free. Norway has profited hugely from the spike in gas and oil prices that followed Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. The state-owned energy giant Equinor made a record $75 billion profit in 2022. Oslo is sensitive to accusations of war profiteering — and keen to show Europe that it cares about its neighbors’ energy security as much as it cares about their cash.
But the threat to the pipelines could also be more low-key. One of the many theories about the Nord Stream attack is that it was carried out by a small group of divers, operating from an ordinary yacht. In such a scenario, something as seemingly innocent as a ship suddenly going stationary, or following an unaccustomed course through the water, could be suspicious. The Bergen’s crew have the authority to board and inspect vessels that its crew consider a cause for concern.
Russia’s covert presence in these waters has been acknowledged by Norway’s intelligence services in recent weeks. A joint investigation by the public broadcasters in Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland uncovered evidence of civilian vessels, such as fishing ships, being used for surveillance activities. This is something that has been “going on forever,” according to Ståle Ulriksen, a researcher at the Royal Norwegian Naval Academy, but it has increased in intensity in recent years.
“We always look for oddities, anything that is unusual, like new ships in the area that have not been here before,” says Magne Storebø, 26, senior petty officer, as he takes the afternoon watch on the bridge later that day.
The sky is leaden and the horizon lost in cloud. Coffee in hand, Storebø casts his eye over the radar and satellite screens as giant windscreen wipers whip North Sea spray from the floor-to-ceiling windows. There are few ships around, all of them familiar to the crew; service vessels plying back and forth from the gas and oil platforms.
The Nord Stream incident and the new security situation has changed the way Storebø thinks about his work, he says.
He is “more aware of the consequences suspicious vessels could have,” he says. “More awake, you could say.”
Senior Petty Officer Magne Storebø keeps watch from the bridge
Soft-spoken and calm beyond his years, Storebø is philosophical about the potential dangers of his work. He has been in the Navy for four years, in which time war has broken out on the European continent and the threat to his home waters has come into sharp focus.
“If you are going to put a rainy cloud over your head and bury yourself down, I don’t think the Navy or the coastguard is the right place to work in,” he says in conversation with two shipmates later that day. “You need to adjust and to look in a positive direction — and to be ready in case things don’t go that way.”
Energy war round two
As Europe emerges from the first winter of its energy war with Russia, its gas supplies have held up better than almost anyone expected.
But as the Continent braces for next winter, the risk of another Nord Stream-style attack to a key pipeline is taken seriously at the highest levels of leadership.
“Things look OK for gas security now,” said one senior European Commission official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters of energy security. “But if Norway has a pipeline that blows up, we are in a different situation.”
EU policymakers see four key risks to gas security going into next winter, the senior official added: exceptionally cold weather; a stronger-than-expected Chinese economic recovery hoovering up global gas supply; Russia cutting off the remaining gas it sends to Europe; and last but not least, an “incident” affecting energy infrastructure.
Such an event might not only threaten supply but could potentially spark panic in the gas market, as seen in 2022, driving up prices and hitting European citizens and industries in the wallet. And nowhere is the potential for harm greater than in the North Sea.
Norway is now Europe’s biggest single supplier of gas. After Russian President Vladimir Putin and the energy giant Gazprom shut off supply via Nord Stream and other pipelines, Norway stepped up its own production in the North Sea, delivering well over 100 billion cubic meters to the EU and the U.K. in 2022. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen visited Troll A herself in March this year — the first visit of a Commission president to Norway since 2011 — to personally thank the country’s president, Jonas Gahr Støre, for supplies that “helped us through the winter.”
“We have a huge responsibility, supplying the rest of Europe with energy,” Defense Minister Bjørn Arild Gram told POLITICO. “To be a stable, reliable producer of energy, of gas, is an important role for us and we take that very seriously. That is why we are also doing so much to protect this infrastructure.”
The vast majority of that gas is transported into northwest Europe via a complex network of seabed pipes — more than 5,000 miles of them in Norway’s jurisdiction alone. The North Sea has an average depth of just 95 meters. That’s not much deeper than the Nord Stream pipes at the location they were attacked.
“It actually doesn’t take a particularly sophisticated capability to attack a pipeline in relatively shallow waters,” says Sidharth Kaushal, research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute think tank in the U.K. A small vessel, “some divers and an [explosive] charge” are all it could take, Kaushal says.
The navy chief
After the Nord Stream incident in September, suspicion instantly fell on Russia. Moscow has a record of operating in the so-called gray zone — committing hostile acts short of warfare, often covertly.
To date, the three investigations looking into the incident have yet to confirm that suspicion. But European governments — and their militaries — are not taking any chances.
In the days immediately following the explosions, NATO navy chiefs started calling each other to try to coordinate efforts to protect energy infrastructure, says Rune Andersen, the chief of Norway’s navy, speaking to POLITICO at Haakonsvern naval base, before the KV Bergen’svoyage.
Everyone had the same thought, he says. “If that happens in the North Sea, we will have a problem.”
Andersen joined the Navy as a young man in 1988, in the last days of the Cold War. Now 54, he is used to the Russian threat overshadowing Norway’s and Europe’s security.
“After decades of attempts to integrate or cooperate with Russia, we now have war in Europe. We see that our neighbor is brutal and willing to use military force,” he says grimly. “I worked in the Navy in the ’90s when it was enduring peace and partnership on the agenda. We are back to a situation where our job feels more meaningful — and necessary.”
Kenneth Dyb, the skippsjef, or commander of the ship
However, he points out, his own forces have so far not seen any Russian movements or operations “that are different to what they were before” the Nord Stream attacks. “The job we are doing is precautionary, rather than tailored to any specific threat,” he adds.
Even so, those early discussions with NATO allies have now formalized into daily coordination via the Allied Maritime Command headquarters in the U.K., to ensure there are always NATO ships on hand that can act as “first responders” to potential incidents. British, German and French ships have joined their Norwegian counterparts in the monitoring and surveillance effort.
It is “by nature challenging” to protect every inch of pipeline, all of the time, Andersen says.
The role of the Bergen and ships like it, he adds, is just “one bit of the puzzle.” Simply by their presence at sea, these ships increase the chances of catching would-be saboteurs in the act, and hopefully deter them from trying in the first place.
The goal, in other words, is to reduce the size of the “gray zone” — or to “increase the resolution” of the navy’s picture of the activity out on the North Sea, as Andersen puts it.
In collaboration with the energy companies and pipeline operators, unmanned underwater vehicles — drones — using cameras and high-resolution sonar have been used, Andersen says, to “map the micro-terrain” around pipelines. These are sensitive enough to spot an explosive charge or other signs of foul play.
Equinor, alongside the pipeline operator Gassco, has carried out a “large inspection survey” of its undersea pipeline infrastructure, a company spokesperson says. The survey revealed “no identified signs of malicious activities” but pipeline inspections are ongoing “continuously.”
Senior Petty Officer Simen Strand speaks to the crew. “We haven’t had much to fear in the past. We are probably less naïve nowadays,” he says.
Perhaps understandably, the heightened level of alert has led to the occasional false alarm. A spate of aerial drone sightings near Norwegian energy infrastructure around the time of the Nord Stream attacks last year included a report of a suspicious craft circling above Haakonsvern naval base itself.
“After a while, we concluded it was a seagull,” says Andersen, with the shadow of a grin.
Europe on alert
The navy chief is nonetheless deadly serious about the potential threat. A Nord Stream-style attack in the North Sea is possible. Anderson will not be drawn on the most vulnerable points in the network, saying only that “easy to access” places and “key hubs” are “two things in the back of mind when we think [about] risk.”
Throughout Europe, the alert has been raised. This month, NATO warned of a “significant risk” that Russia could target undersea pipelines or internet cables as part of its confrontation with the West.
Several countries are increasing patrols and underwater surveillance capabilities. The British Royal Navy accelerated the purchase of two specialist ocean surveillance ships, the first of which will be operational this summer. The EU and NATO have established a new joint task force focusing on critical infrastructure protection, and a “coordination cell” has been established at NATO headquarters in Brussels to improve “engagement with industry and bring key military and civilian stakeholders together” to keep the cables and pipelines secure.
Norway — and Europe — are in this struggle for the long haul, Andersen believes.
Indeed, even as Europe transitions from fossil fuels to green energy, the North Sea will remain a vital powerhouse of offshore wind energy, with plans for a huge expansion over the next 25 years. Earlier this year, the Netherlands’ intelligence services reported a Russian ship seeking to map wind farm infrastructure in the Dutch sector of the North Sea. “We think the Russians wanted to investigate the possibilities for potential future sabotage,” Jan Swillens, head of the Dutch Military Intelligence and Security Service tells POLITICO in an emailed statement. “This incident makes clear that these kinds of Russian operations are performed closer than one might think.”
At the same time in the Baltic, countries are shoring up security around their infrastructure, at sea and on land. Late last year, Estonia carried out an underwater inspection of the two Estlink power cables and the Baltic Connector gas pipeline linking it to Finland, the Estonian navy says. Lithuania, meanwhile, is paying “special attention” to security around its LNG terminal at Klaipėda and the gas cargoes that arrive there, a defense ministry spokesperson says.
Torgeir Standal, left, the KV Bergen’s second in command
It was in Lithuania that Europe had its first major false alarm since the Nord Stream incident, when a gas pipeline on land exploded on a Friday evening in January. Foul play was briefly considered a possibility in the immediate aftermath but was quickly ruled out. The pipe was 40 years old, and had been subject to a technical fault.
The danger posed by Russia to infrastructure throughout Europe should not be underestimated, says Vilmantas Vitkauskas, director of Lithuania’s National Crisis Management Centre and a former NATO intelligence official.
“We know their way of thinking, [the way] they send signals or apply pressure,” Vitkauskas says. “We understand Russia quite well, and we are quite worried by what we see — and how vulnerable our infrastructure is in Europe.”
The watchers on the water
Back aboard the Bergen, life for the sailors carries on as normal. It’s a young crew, with an average age of around 30. Some are conscripts. It’s still compulsory in Norway for 19-year-olds to present themselves for national service, but only around one in four are actually recruited for the mandated 19-month stint.
The days are long. Surveillance, maintenance and exercises in search and rescue are all part of the crew’s regular routine. A helicopter from one of the Oseberg oil and gas platforms soars overhead, and the crew are drafted into an exercise winching people on and off the deck of the Bergenin the dead of night, simulating a rescue operation.
The ship needs to be ready to respond to an incident should the call come in from naval headquarters that help is required, or a suspicious vessel has been identified in their patch of the North Sea. But in their downtime, the sailors head to the gym on the lower deck, or play FIFA on the X-box in the sparse games room. Three hearty meals a day are served in the galley kitchen. There is even a ship’s band, cheekily named “Dyb Purple” after their commander. Dyb “takes it well,” says Senior Petty Officer Storebø.
In the daily whirl of activity, most of the young sailors don’t think of their work in the grand strategic sense of protecting the energy security — the warmth, the light, the industry — of an entire continent.
But the context of the Ukraine war — and the precedent set by the Nord Stream attack — has added a note of solemnity just below the surface of the comradeship and bonhomie.
“We are probably less naïve nowadays,” says 33-year-old Senior Petty Officer Simen Strand, who has a wife and two children, a boy and a girl, back home in Bergen. “We haven’t had much to fear in the past, there hasn’t been a concrete threat.”
Storebø agrees but is characteristically sanguine. “Russia has always been there … I’ve not personally felt any more unease than before.”
The next day, Storebø has the night watch, from midnight to four in the morning, as the Bergen travels back to base for a short stop before heading out to sea again.
It’s dark up on the bridge, with the glow of the control panel screens the only light inside. Twenty miles away, little lights can be seen on the Norwegian coast. A lighthouse flares to the south, at Slåtterøy, not far from Storebø’s home island of Austevoll. Beneath the waves, unseen, gas flows from the Troll field back to the mainland, where it is processed. From there, it continues its journey south to light the dark of European nights.
All is quiet but Storebø can’t afford to lose focus. “Coffee and music help,” he says. “I like the night shifts.”
As the officer of the watch, he has to be ready, should the radar, the satellites, or his own eyes see something out of the ordinary — ready to call the captain and raise the alarm.
That’s the job, he says. “You always have it in the back of your mind.”
Melville-based Haugland Energy Group has been awarded a contract worth at least $200 million to install an underground duct system for Sunrise Wind’s onshore transmission line.
The contract awarded Haugland Energy, an affiliate of Haugland Group, is the largest so far to come out of the offshore wind-power project and is expected to create more than 400 union jobs, according to a statement from Sunrise Wind’s joint venture partners Eversource and Ørsted.
Haugland Group had already completed similar work for Eversource and Ørsted’s South Fork Wind project, which will power some 70,000 homes annually when it begins operations at the end of the year.
Sunrise Wind is a 924-megawatt offshore wind project to be located about 30 miles east of Montauk. The project by itself will achieve roughly 10 percent of the state’s offshore wind goal of 9,000 megawatts by 2035, while also bringing $700 million of investment to Suffolk County and creating 800 direct jobs and thousands of indirect jobs in the state, according to the statement.
In Nov. 2022, the New York Public Service Commission approved the project’s underground transmission route that will deliver electricity from Sunrise Windto the existing Long Island electrical grid via a 124-mile submarine export cable. The onshore transmission cable will make landfall deep below the beach at Smith Point County Park in Shirley and follow an 18-mile route below publicly owned roads and rights-of-way to an interconnection point at the existing Holbrook substation.
Onshore construction work is expected to begin later this year, with Sunrise Wind expected to be fully operational by the end of 2025.
“Haugland Group LLC thanks Eversource and Ørsted for their continued confidence, as we are proudly named their local, chosen partner for Sunrise Wind,” Billy Haugland II, CEO of Haugland Group, said in the statement. “As New York State takes its boldest step towards carbon neutrality, Haugland Group is proud to cement its leadership role in the renewable energy industry. Sunrise Wind represents amplified opportunities for all Long Islanders, invigorating the local labor force and creating more than 400 union jobs, as well as new opportunities for local businesses and the contracting communities alike. Haugland Group is honored to be entrusted with Long Island’s utility infrastructure, while creating economic opportunities for Long Islanders.”
Joe Nolan, chairman, president and CEO of Eversource Energy said the award is one of the largest offshore wind supply chain investments ever made in the United States.
“And together with our state partners, we are committed to building a new clean energy future for the Empire State that will provide not only significant new benefits for local communities but also greater economic opportunity for workers,” Nolan said in the statement.
The New York State Public Service Commission approved a transmission line that will deliver electricity from a proposed wind-power project off the coast of Long Island to the existing electrical grid.
The 25-mile offshore/onshore transmission line will carry electricity from the planned Sunrise Wind installation to an existing substation in Brookhaven.
The proposed 924-megawatt project is the largest offshore wind farm to be connected to New York’s electric grid so far. The wind farm project, which has the potential capacity to power nearly 600,000 homes, is being developed as a partnership between Ørsted and Eversource, with support from Con Edison Transmission and the New York Power Authority, who will assist the development of the transmission facilities needed to deliver the offshore wind energy to the electric transmission grid, according to a statement from Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office.
“New York is taking bold action to address the climate crisis, and projects like Sunrise Wind demonstrate our leadership on clean energy,” Hochul said in the statement. “As we work to advance our nation-leading climate goals and create the jobs of the future, offshore wind projects will be critical to deliver clean energy to all New Yorkers.”
Developers expect the offshore wind farm will be fully operational by 2025, resulting in a direct investment of more than $408 million in New York and the creation of 800 direct jobs in the state, plus thousands of indirect jobs, according to the statement. The transmission line just approved by the PSC is being built by Sunrise Wind, which is entering negotiations with contractors and trade labor organizations on a project labor agreement to cover construction activities for the project and committing to paying prevailing wages.
“Today we take the next great step in connecting Long Island’s workforce to the heart of our new economy for New York State,” Matthew Aracich, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Nassau and Suffolk Counties, said in the statement. I’d like to express my sincere appreciation to Governor Hochul for her leadership in advancing the offshore wind industry here on Long Island. The governor has delivered on her promise of making workforce development her top priority through the creation of the new offshore wind industry here on Long Island. The governor’s approval of the transmission line for Sunrise Wind will actively put our members to work. When we create good paying, union jobs, especially in the emerging green energy industry, we are really creating careers.”
The approved transmission project includes a high-voltage, submarine export cable bundle up to 5.2 miles long that will enter New York State territorial waters 3 nautical miles from land. The transmission line will then transition from an offshore cable to an onshore cable that will travel up to 17.2 miles to an onshore converter station.
“We have a historic opportunity on Long Island to capitalize on the economic benefits from the new offshore wind industry and the approval of the Sunrise Wind transmission cable brings us one step closer to creating hundreds of union jobs and powering Long Island with clean energy,” Matt Cohen, CEO of the Long Island Association, said via email.
Suffolk County has purchased a state-owned property located in Brentwood for $1.46 million to create a National Offshore Wind Training Center.
The site is a 50,000-square-foot under-utilized building on about 5 acres on Wicks Road. It comes with a 22-year licensing agreement with the county, will be home to a facility aimed at providing training in wind power technology, particularly for high school students and college-age individuals.
The NOWTC facility will be funded by a $10 million investment by Sunrise Wind (a joint venture of Ørsted A/S and Eversource Energy), in partnership with the Long Island Federation of Labor-AFLCIO, the Nassau and Suffolk Building and Construction Trades Council, Suffolk County Community College, International Brotherhood of Electric Workers, the Utility Workers Union of America, BlueGreen Alliance and Minority Millennials.
In addition, Gov. Kathy Hochul launched a $9 million competitive solicitation through the state’s Offshore Wind Training Institute for proposals for new workforce development and training initiatives from technical/vocational high schools, community colleges, universities, unions, training and job placement intermediaries, community-based organizations and non-profit organizations.
The effort is being led by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority in collaboration with the State University of New York Farmingdale State College and Stony Brook University, for expanded offshore wind workforce development and training initiatives to address workforce gaps and prepare New Yorkers for high-growth jobs in the wind power industry.
The training initiatives support the state’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act goal to develop 9,000 megawatts of offshore wind by 2035.
“We are partnering with innovative, industry leading companies and spearheading billions in public and private investments to spur economic development and good-paying jobs for New Yorkers,” Hochul said in a written statement. “The national Offshore Wind Training Center will enhance our efforts to prepare our workforce for the green jobs of the future, support the physical infrastructure needed for these clean energy projects, and solidify New York’s role as a global leader in this powerhouse industry.”
Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone said: “Ensuring that every individual in every community in our region has the same opportunity for success is key to growing our economy. This community-centered hub is a place for education, government, industry and the community to come together to open doors to opportunity. The partnership with the National Offshore Wind Training Center will allow our residents to be at the center of the emerging offshore wind industry.”
The newly created NOWTC will collaborate with the state’s $20 million Offshore Wind Training Institute (OWTI) to establish comprehensive and cross-cutting offshore wind and clean energy training and workforce development initiatives. The OWTI will train 2,500 New York workers beginning this year through 2027 to support both offshore and onshore renewable energy projects.
“Clean energy means new jobs and the National Offshore Wind Training Center will position Long Islanders to reap the economic benefits of this brand-new industry off our coast,” said Matt Cohen, Long Island Association president & CEO.
Nassau and Suffolk Building and Construction Trades President Matthew Aracich thanked the governor for her efforts in advancing the offshore wind industry here on Long Island.
The NOWTC “facility will serve as a magnet to attract talent through workforce development programs in the Brentwood community and help point the youth to explore new paths in career opportunities,” Aracich said in the statement. “NOWTC’s strategic partnership with Orsted and Maersk will create a central training facility that will make GWO certification available to anyone working in the Offshore Wind industry and fills a niche that is needed in preparation for the 9GW of offshore wind we are building right here on Long Island.”
For more details on the training solicitation visit: nyserda.ny.gov.