A massive blow against offshore wind came July 30 as the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management abruptly rescinded all Wind Energy Areas it has designated on the Outer Continental Shelf, cancelling years of planning dating back to 2014.

“By rescinding WEAs, BOEM is ending the federal practice of designating large areas of the OCS for speculative wind development, and is de-designating over 3.5 million acres of unleased federal waters previously targeted for offshore wind development across the Gulf of America, Gulf of Maine, the New York Bight, California, Oregon, and the Central Atlantic,” according to a BOEM statement.

The BOEM cancellation followed Interior Secretary Doug Burgum’s order Tuesday to “end preferential treatment for unreliable energy sources like wind.”   

“At the end of the last administration, over 3.5 million acres offshore were designated as Wind Energy Areas, which are pre-approved zones where the federal government could auction leases for offshore wind development,” according to a statement from Burgum’s office Tuesday. By terminating these Wind Energy Areas, we are safeguarding our coastal environments and local economies from unchecked development, while ensuring our power grids are not underpinned by unreliable, subsidized energy sources.”

 The Interior statement further promised to engage with stakeholders who have opposed wind projects.

“The Department will strengthen its guidance to ensure more meaningful consultation regarding offshore wind development, especially with tribes, the fishing industry, and coastal towns. The construction and operation of offshore wind turbines have disproportionate impacts on these stakeholders, from disrupting commercial fishing to driving away tourism.” 

President Trump campaigned in 2024 on a promise to end all offshore wind projects “on day one” of his second term, and Burgum moved to fulfill that by issuing a stop-work order on Equinor’s Empire Wind project off New York.

After the Trump administration and New York State officials reached a deal to allow Equinor to resume work, Burgum reversed that order in May – to the dismay and rage of offshore wind opponents, who have been pressuring the administration to block wind developers.

Trump himself has only intensified his denunciations off wind power, publicly arguing on his recent trip to meet European leaders that their nations must abandon wind development

Offshore wind advocates at the Oceanic Network reacted quickly to the Interior Department’s broadside.

“The Department of Interior’s latest directives continue a false narrative on an established American industry that will prevent an important source of baseload power generation from reaching the grid when ratepayers are already feeling the effects of rising electricity prices,” said Stephanie Francoeur, Oceantic’;s senior vice president of communications and external affairs.  

This will result in even higher energy costs, increased blackouts, job loss, and billions of dollars in stranded investments, further delaying shovel-ready projects supported by a domestic heavy manufacturing supply chain renaissance that spans 40 states,” said Francoeur.

 

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Associate Editor Kirk Moore was a reporter for the Asbury Park Press for more than 30 years and a 25-year field editor for National Fisherman before joining our Commercial Marine editorial staff in 2015. He wrote several award-winning stories on marine, environmental, coastal and military issues that helped drive federal and state government policy changes. Moore was awarded the Online News Association 2011 Knight Award for Public Service for the “Barnegat Bay Under Stress,” 2010 series that led to the New Jersey state government’s restoration plan. He lives in West Creek, N.J.

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