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Federal courts this week have cleared all five offshore wind projects that were suspended by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Dec. 22 stop-work order, allowing construction to resume while underlying lawsuits proceed.
The final injunction was granted to Denmark’s Ørsted for the 924 MW Sunrise Wind off New York after U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth found developers faced irreparable harm from delays, including the potential loss of a specialized cable‑laying vessel.
Earlier rulings restored work at Vineyard Wind (about 800 MW, offshore Massachusetts), Revolution Wind (700 MW, Rhode Island), Empire Wind (2 GW, New York) and the 2.6 GW Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind.
Developers say the pause, justified by the Interior on vaguely described national security grounds, caused major daily costs and operational disruption — Ørsted cited more than $1.25 million per day in losses on Sunrise and $7 billion committed to the project overall.
The Interior Department has declined comment because litigation is pending.
Industry groups and state officials welcomed the rulings but warned that the injunctions are temporary and that the administration’s continued classified security claims and broader policy shifts have already raised long‑term financing, scheduling and permitting risks for U.S. offshore wind.
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Utility and Energy Transmission & Distribution News | Utility DiveTrump administration is now 0-5 in latest effort to halt offshore wind





















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