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Judge Lets Revolution Wind Restart, Undercutting Trump’s Offshore Pause

The decision rebukes the administration’s classified rationale, putting its broader halt on offshore wind under immediate judicial scrutiny.

Overview

  • U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth granted a preliminary injunction restoring construction on Ørsted’s nearly complete Revolution Wind serving Rhode Island and Connecticut.
  • He found the Interior Department’s Dec. 22 lease suspension likely arbitrary under the Administrative Procedure Act and said the developer faces irreparable harm.
  • The administration froze five East Coast projects citing undisclosed Defense findings on radar interference, a basis developers say they cannot review or rebut.
  • Parallel challenges by Equinor’s Empire Wind and Dominion’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind, plus lawsuits from New York Attorney General Letitia James over Empire Wind 1 and Sunrise Wind, are headed to injunction hearings this week.
  • Developers and New York officials warn the stop‑work orders imperil billions in investment, thousands of jobs, and state clean‑energy targets, while President Trump has pledged to block new “windmills.”