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Energy

Sparks

Offshore Wind Developers Are Now 3 for 3 Against Trump

A third judge rejected a stop work order, allowing the Coastal Virginia offshore wind project to proceed.

AM Briefing

Empire Strikes Back

On a Trump’s PJM push, Ford-BYD tie-up, and the Mongolian atom

Green
Sparks

New York’s Empire Wind Project May Resume Construction, Judge Says

The decision marks the Trump administration’s second offshore wind defeat this week.

Green
A data center.

Cowboy Beepboop

On Heatmap's annual survey, Trump’s wind ‘spillover,’ and Microsoft’s soil deal

Yellow
A pipeline.

Power to the Pipelines

On PJM backs offshore wind, reconciliation 2.0, and nuclear to the moon

Yellow
AM Briefing

Revolution Back On

On bring-your-own-power, Trump’s illegal energy cuts, and New York’s nuclear bonanza

Wind turbine blades.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Temperatures in Buffalo, New York, are set to plunge by 40 degrees Fahrenheit • Snow could hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast as early as midweek • A cold snap in northern India is thickening fog in the region.


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Sparks

How Trump’s Case Against Revolution Wind Fell Apart (Again)

A federal court has once again allowed Orsted to resume construction on its offshore wind project.

Donald Trump and wind turbines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A federal court struck down the Trump administration’s three-month stop work order on Orsted’s Revolution offshore wind farm, once again allowing construction to resume (for the second time).

Explaining his ruling from the bench Monday, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth said that project developer Orsted — and the states of Rhode Island and Connecticut, which filed their own suit in support of the company — were “likely” to win on the merits of their lawsuit that the stop work order violated the Administrative Procedures Act. Lamberth said that the Trump administration’s stop work order, issued just before Christmas, amounted to a change in administration position without adequate justification. The justice said he was not sure the emergency being described by the government exists, and that the “stated national security reason may have been pretextual.”

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