The proposed factory would have been constructed on the old site of a coal-fired power plant.
The proposed factory would have been constructed on the old site of a coal-fired power plant.
Ben Berke / The Public’s Radio

Prysmian Abandons Plans for Offshore Wind Cable Factory in Somerset

Share
The proposed factory would have been constructed on the old site of a coal-fired power plant.
The proposed factory would have been constructed on the old site of a coal-fired power plant.
Ben Berke / The Public’s Radio
Prysmian Abandons Plans for Offshore Wind Cable Factory in Somerset
Copy

An Italian company has abandoned plans to build a factory in Somerset that would have supplied undersea cables to American offshore wind farms.

The proposed factory would have created between 200 and 350 manufacturing jobs at the site of an old coal fired power plant in Somerset’s Brayton Point neighborhood.

The Prysmian Group announced on Friday that it is abandoning plans for the factory, after spending three years in a fight to secure permits and a tax break from the town and fend off lawsuits from neighbors. In a prepared statement, the company said it is aligning its manufacturing capacity with market demand.

Local leaders said Pres. Donald Trump’s hostility towards the offshore wind industry killed the project.

“Donald Trump has unraveled that promise of good jobs by threatening a moratorium on offshore wind, generating so much uncertainty that companies pull back investment,” said U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss.

Prysmian’s decision also dealt a blow to former Pres. Joe Biden, who hoped the factory would showcase the offshore wind industry’s potential to create manufacturing jobs and a vast new source of renewable energy.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

What Trump and Mamdani share in common, plus RI Senate leaders turn out for a rival to a Senate incumbent
Rhode Island will allocate up to $3 million from an escrow account to support the operation of the hospitals
An estimated 13,000 enrollees may drop coverage by the end of the year as federal tax credits expire
The new language in the ordinance would bar Providence police from complying with any federal agency’s request for assistance unless they provide a criminal warrant signed by a judge