Monday, September 1, 2025

Wind-farm halts threaten blue-collar jobs

Trump and offshore energy |
Bloomberg

Today's newsletter looks at how President Donald Trump's wind-farm halts are threatening blue-collar workers' jobs. You can also read and share the full story on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe

The threat to blue-collar jobs

By Jennifer A Dlouhy

In the run-up to Labor Day today, the White House has been touting President Donald Trump's commitment to US workers, with the Interior Department  praising the men and women "fueling America's offshore energy industry."

But the administration has halted work on wind farms off the East Coast, disrupting plans at multibillion-dollar projects and risking jobs. That's why all the praise for labor rings a bit hollow for union leader Patrick Crowley in Rhode Island, where a stop-work order halted construction of a nearly-finished offshore wind farm, sidelining roughly 1,000 workers. Crowley, the president of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO, said his members were stung by the administration's move against the Revolution Wind project.

"A lot of them voted for Trump, and they didn't vote to have their jobs cut," Crowley said. "That's the level of anger right now."

As Trump's long-running derision of wind power escalates into a targeted campaign against the turbines he calls bird-killing eyesores, industry advocates say the president's moves are running counter to some of his own ambitions. For instance, the work disruptions are ensnaring the blue-collar workers he championed in his 2024 bid for a second term. And putting potential energy sources on the chopping block also threatens Trump's goal of winning the global competition to dominate power-hungry artificial intelligence technology.

Read More: Trump Channels Hatred for Wind Farms Into Strike Against Orsted

In a statement, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said that Trump "has ended Joe Biden's war on American energy and restored American energy dominance. This means prioritizing the most effective and reliable tools to power our country, which includes following through on his promise to 'Drill, Baby, Drill' and unleash domestic oil, gas, and nuclear power – supporting thousands of good-paying energy jobs across the country."

So far, stop-work orders and yanked permits — as well as the threats of them — have disrupted plans for at least four permitted wind farms off the US East Coast this year. Revolution Wind, a project meant to supply 704 megawatts of electricity to Connecticut and Rhode Island, was already roughly 80% built on Aug. 22, when the Interior Department told developer Orsted A/S to halt work on the site.

Project backers are lobbying Trump administration officials to reverse course, warning that the intensifying federal government strikes against offshore wind projects threaten billions of dollars of investment in the US — as well as American jobs and domestic manufacturing far from the coast, in Republican strongholds such as Louisiana.

The Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management cited concerns about "the protection of national security interests" and interference in various uses of coastal waters when ordering the work stoppage at Revolution Wind.

The hits to the offshore wind workforce are especially salient for a president who has "talked a lot about the workers of America" and has enjoyed labor union support, said Hillary Bright, executive director of the not-for-profit industry advocacy group Turn Forward.

At Revolution Wind near Rhode Island, Crowley said that the administration's order is stoking uncertainty — and backlash — among specially trained workers, though the economic impacts extend to manufacturing in other states.

"These are working-class, blue-collar jobs. These are the jobs the president talked about protecting," Crowley said. "This isn't just a Rhode Island project. It's an American project."

    Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

    Not backing down

    $1 billion
    This is almost how much Equinor ASA will spend backing Orsted A/S's share sale, in a crucial show of support as the Danish firm seeks to steady its finances following the Trump's administration's attacks on offshore wind.

    What's next for Orsted?

    "It was such a darling of a company. It was considered this extraordinary example of a company that was focused on oil, natural gas and coal, with some wind, to going full throttle to become a wind company...[But with] so many of its projects being challenged, how does it pivot?"
    Carolyn Kissane
    Associate dean at the Center for Global Affairs at New York University, where she teaches about energy and climate change

    More from Green

    Tesla accounted for more than a fifth of new car sales in Norway in August, with electric cars as a whole accounting for 97% of new passenger vehicle registrations.

    Tesla models were close to 22% of new car sales in August, with Volkswagen making up about 13%, according to the Norwegian Road Federation. Chinese manufacturer BYD more than tripled the number of cars it registered in the country last month, while Toyota and Volvo monthly sales were well below where they were a year earlier.

    Norway became the first country to see EV brands overtake fossil-fuel models in new car registrations in 2020, a surge that was underpinned by incentives ranging from reduced tolls to no or lower value-added taxes. With such a high penetration of electric cars, producers have flocked to the market with about 170 electric-powered models to choose from.

    "It will be interesting to see how this develops in relation to the classic brands that Norwegians have traditionally chosen," the OFV's Solberg Thorsen said Monday.

    Tesla charging stations. Photographer: Naina Helén Jåma/Bloomberg

    The head of this year's UN climate summit in Brazil urged CEOs to ignore the Trump-led green backlash and come to the Amazonian city of Belem to step up the fight against global warming.

    Exxon Mobil Corp. said net zero goals for the global energy sector are likely to drift further beyond 2050 due to consumers pushing back against high costs and a revival in demand for coal, the most polluting fossil fuel.

    Zimbabwe published draft regulations to establish a National Climate Fund that will finance projects aimed at mitigating the impact of climate change and respond to emergencies.

    Listen again

    Water scarcity is no longer a distant threat: By 2030, fresh water demand is expected to outpace supply by 40%. The effects of water stress will be felt in industries from agriculture to e-commerce, putting up to $70 trillion of global GDP at risk, according to the World Resources Institute. Bloomberg Intelligence researcher Melanie Rua, co-author of a report on water scarcity, joined Zero earlier this year to discuss just how much financial impact companies are already seeing as a result of this issue — and what measures they might take to mitigate it.

    Listen now, and subscribe on Apple,  Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

    Abandoned pipes from an ongoing water project connecting the city to a dam 400km away, outside Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on Oct. 28, 2024.  Photographer: Zinyang Auntony/Bloomberg

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