Since taking office, the administration has sought to exit the green transition by cancelling leases and paying out companies like TotalEnergies and Duke Energy to abandon offshore sites. The Interior Department justifies these buyouts as a move toward energy security, yet critics point to the massive financial toll. Sam Salustro of the Oceanic Network described the strategy as an admission of defeat in court, noting that the administration is using public funds to artificially terminate legally binding contracts.
Regulatory hurdles have paralyzed the industry, with the Pentagon halting essential radar and flight path reviews for over 100 projects across 21 states. This indefinite stall, involving an estimated $47 billion in potential investment, has triggered a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon. Simultaneously, the judicial branch is pushing back on executive overreach. In June, Judge Kollar-Kotelly of the District of Columbia overturned Treasury guidance that had stripped solar and wind projects of critical tax credits, citing a failure to adhere to the Administrative Procedure Act. These setbacks suggest that while the administration remains committed to prioritizing conventional fossil fuels, the combination of court rulings and rising consumer energy costs is making the systematic dismantling of the wind sector an increasingly difficult and expensive political liability.
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