Feds Deliver Offshore Wind SHOCK to RI’s Crumbling Energy Strategy
PUBLISHER’s NOTE: This administrative ruling by the US government may not be the last. On August 18, CEO for the Rhode Island Center for Freedom & Prosperity, Mike Stenhouse, co-signed a letter, along with national energy expert, G. Allen Brooks, requesting Doug Brugum, Secretary of the US Department Of the Interior (DOI), and other federal officials to accept the formal petition previously filed Seafreeze Inc (and others) that calls upon the government to immediately suspend “further construction and energy generation activity” of the near-completed Vineyard Wind off-shore wind project.
PROGRAMMING NOTE: Brooks and Meghan Lapp, attorney and fisheries industry liaison, are scheduled to be guests on In The Dugout with Mike Stenhouse on Tuesday, August 26. Check back to this story for the link.
The column below, about a federal order to stop construction on a similar offshore wind project, Revolution Wind, was originally published August 23 on the Energy Musings Substack by Allen Brooks, as:
Another Offshore Wind Industry Shock
At 4:00 pm on Friday, the Daily Caller News Foundation broke an exclusive story that the U.S. had ordered construction work on the offshore Revolution Wind project to stop. The article,” EXCLUSIVE: Trump Admin Kills Massive Offshore Wind Project,” announced the Department of the Interior’s (DOI) action.
Revolution Wind is a 704-megawatt (MW), 65-turbine wind project located 15 miles south of Rhode Island’s Point Judith port and 32 miles southwest of Martha’s Vineyard. The capacity has been contracted to utilities in Massachusetts (304 MW) and Rhode Island (400 MW). A second Revolution Wind project was rejected by Rhode Island Energy and Rhode Island’s Public Utility Commission and Department of Energy staff as too expensive.
The project is located on the federal lease area (OCS-A 0486), which developer Ørsted acquired when it purchased Deepwater Wind LLC, the developer of the Block Island Wind farm and holder of various offshore wind leases, in late 2018 for $510 million.
The locations of significant offshore wind projects.

Construction work on Revolution Wind began in 2023 with the installation of the first offshore wind turbine in September 2024. Completion and operation of the project will be in early 2026. Ørsted reported Friday night that the project was 80% complete with 45 of 65 wind turbines installed. The project was hailed as the first multi-state offshore wind project in the United States.
The DOI Director’s Order was issued by Matthew Giacona, Acting Director. We compared his letter with the one issued by Walter Cruickshank on April 16, 2025, ordering work on Empire Wind to stop. The letters are different, which we find interesting.
In the Empire Wind order, the DOI cited as its reason to stop work “to allow time for it to address feedback it has received, including from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), about the environmental analyses for that project. BOEM received this and other feedback regarding Empire Wind as an outgrowth of the review that the Department is engaged in related to offshore wind projects.”
In contrast, the Revolution Wind order stated: “In particular, BOEM is seeking to address concerns related to the protection of national security interests of the United States and prevention of interference with reasonable uses of the exclusive economic zone, the high seas, and the territorial seas, as described in that subsection of OCSLA.”
We know two relevant facts and one supposition. The supposition relates to the reported agreement between the Trump administration and New York Governor Kathy Hochul for her support in the issuance of previously blocked permits allowing the construction of two natural gas pipelines into the state. That would boost supply to both New York and New England, both of which are short of natural gas supply for generating electricity during the winter months when the gas is diverted to home heating. That shortage causes winter electricity prices in the region to be much higher than during the summer months.
With respect to the DOI stop-work order for Revolution Wind, the issue is compliance with Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) provisions. We know that consulting firm PLANET A* STRATEGIES℠ studied the compliance of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) with the provisions of the laws governing the use of our nation’s oceans. The report was titled, “Cancelling Offshore Wind Leases” with a subheading of “Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Non-Compliance in Offshore Wind Plant Leasing and Permitting Programs.” Their report was completed in early May, and the findings were presented to the DOI.
We will be watching the subsequent developments with Revolution Wind. Its developer, Ørsted, is experiencing serious financial problems, and this stop-work order only adds to its challenges. The company is in the process of raising $9.4 billion of additional capital to support its ongoing developments.
At the time of the Empire Wind stop-work order in April, we predicted the summer would be an interesting period for offshore wind legal activity. So far, we have not been disappointed. To add to the legal activity, a petition was recently sent to the Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum requesting a re-examination of the approval of Sunrise Wind, a 924 MW, 84-turbine project. It is located about 19 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard, 30 miles east of Montauk Point, Long Island, and 17 miles from Rhode Island’s Block Island. This is another project being constructed by Ørsted.
The approval process for Sunrise Wind is being challenged by the former members of the Rhode Island Fishermen’s Advisory Board (FAB), established under legislation regulating the state’s Department of Environmental Management’s review and approval of offshore wind projects that impact the state’s waters.
The complaint demonstrates “misapplication of section 8(p)(4) of OCSLA and misapplication of NEPA (National Environmental Protection Act), attest to the illegal impacts to the fishing industry that were ignored in permitting the project, attest to the environmental impacts that were ignored in permitting the project, and request that all approvals of the project be rescinded.”
Once again, parties involved in the offshore wind approval process are speaking out about violations of the legal approval process, which have and will continue to harm other legitimate users of the ocean shared with the wind project. The approval process ensures that all parties’ concerns are addressed and mitigated as best as possible. In the case of Sunrise Wind, according to the plaintiffs, this standard was ignored.
As we enter the last days of summer, the legal battles over offshore wind are heating up.
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