Trump Halts Construction on Nearly Complete Wind Farm Off Rhode Island

A federal agency issued a stop-work order affecting Orsted’s Revolution Wind farm on Friday afternoon, citing unspecified national security concerns

Dolphins swim among the Vineyard Wind 1 turbines, July 23, 2025.
Dolphins swim among the Vineyard Wind 1 turbines, July 23, 2025.
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Dolphins swim among the Vineyard Wind 1 turbines, July 23, 2025.
Dolphins swim among the Vineyard Wind 1 turbines, July 23, 2025.
Trump Halts Construction on Nearly Complete Wind Farm Off Rhode Island
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President Trump’s administration has ordered a developer to halt construction on a nearly complete offshore wind farm off Rhode Island’s coast, casting the future of the state’s largest renewable energy project into doubt.

In a stop-work order issued on Friday afternoon, the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said it is seeking to address national security concerns raised by the construction of Revolution Wind.

The brief letter, signed by BOEM’s acting director Matthew Giacona, did not specify what those security concerns are.

Orsted, a Danish energy company developing the wind farm, received construction permits from the Biden administration in 2023. The company also has power purchase agreements with Rhode Island and Connecticut, where state officials estimated the wind farm would power up to 350,000 homes upon completion next year.

The project was nearly 80 percent finished, according to Orsted, with 45 of its 65 turbines installed.

In a press release, Orsted said it would comply with the stop-work order while it evaluates options to resolve the matter, including legal action.

The order does not impact similarly sized offshore wind farms like Vineyard Wind and Empire Wind, which other developers are constructing in nearby federal waters. The Trump administration halted work on Empire Wind for a month this spring before allowing construction to continue.

Politicians at Rhode Island’s highest levels of government vowed to fight the Trump administration to get Revolution Wind back under construction. State officials said they are considering legal action as well.

Revolution Wind is central to Rhode Island’s plan for a complete transition to clean energy sources by 2033, which the state passed in 2021 through legislation known as the Act on Climate. Revolution Wind was projected to double Rhode Island’s supply of renewable energy when operating at full capacity, according to the state’s attorney general, Peter Neronha.

“Without Revolution Wind, our Act on Climate is dead in the water,” Neronha said. “With the significant investments made in this project already and its obvious benefit to our economy and climate, the Trump Administration’s attempt to halt it can only be characterized as bizarre.”

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee said the action puts hundreds of American jobs at risk. Orsted built a factory in Providence where it manufactures turbine foundations for several wind farms under development along the East Coast.

Orsted also hires from local construction unions to assemble turbines at a port facility in New London, Conn., and install them offshore about 15 miles south of Rhode Island’s coast.

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