Denmark-based vitality developer Ørsted introduced right this moment that its Revolution Wind three way partnership with Skyborn Renewables has filed a grievance in a U.S. District Court docket difficult an order by the Trump administration’s Bureau of Ocean Vitality Administration (BOEM) to halt work on the practically full multi-billion greenback offshore wind venture off the coast of Rhode Island, solely weeks earlier than it was anticipated to start offering energy.
Skyborn Renewables is owned by BlackRock’s infrastructure funding unit International Infrastructure Companions.
The work stoppage order fashioned a part of an introduced pause by the Trump administration in December of the leases for all large-scale offshore wind initiatives underneath development within the U.S., citing “nationwide safety dangers” probably ensuing from the initiatives. The orders will freeze the event of 5 main initiatives alongside the U.S. east coast, representing practically 6 GW of vitality, that have been set to enter industrial operation over the following 2 years.
Ørsted’s problem follows an analogous lawsuit launched by Dominion Vitality, the developer of the biggest of the paused initiatives, Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW), which rejected the administration’s nationwide safety justification for the order, and steered as a substitute that it stemmed from an “unfounded animus” by the administration in opposition to wind vitality.
The federal government order varieties the most recent in a sequence of strikes by the Trump administration to cease the event of renewable vitality initiatives, beginning with a Presidential Memorandum signed by Trump on his first day in workplace, indefinitely halting all federal approvals for wind vitality initiatives. The order was lately struck down by a U.S. federal court docket, which dominated that it was “arbitrary and capricious and opposite to regulation.”
The suspension order additionally marks the second try by the administration to cease the Revolution Wind venture, following an order in August 2025 by BOEM to halt the development of the venture, which was overturned in September by a federal court docket. In its court docket filings difficult the primary order, Ørsted acknowledged that roughly $5 billion had already been spent or dedicated to the offshore wind venture.
In an announcement asserting the court docket problem, Ørsted famous that the venture secured all required federal and state permits in 2023, together with participating “in years-long session with the united statesDepartment of Protection [War] Navy Aviation and Set up Assurance Siting Clearinghouse to handle potential impacts to nationwide safety and protection capabilities,” which led to “a completely executed formal settlement between the Division of Struggle, the Division of the Air Drive, and Revolution Wind outlining mitigation measures by the Undertaking,” and that the venture acquired approvals from the U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Military Corps of Engineers, Nationwide Marine Fisheries Service, and different businesses.
The corporate added:
“Revolution Wind has spent and dedicated billions of {dollars} in reliance upon, and has met the requests of, an intensive assessment course of.”
Building on the Revolution Wind venture started in 2023, and the venture is now 87% full, in accordance with Ørsted. The 704 MW venture is predicted to supply energy to greater than 350,000 properties in 2026 by way of 20-year energy buy agreements (PPAs) with utilities in Connecticut and Rhode Island.
Ørsted acknowledged that the venture was anticipated to start producing energy as quickly as January 2026, previous to the brand new suspension order.
Ørsted can also be the proprietor of the Dawn Wind venture off the coast of New York, which has additionally been paused by the BOEM order. The corporate stated that it’s also contemplating authorized proceedings as a part of its choices to handle the suspension of that venture as effectively.













