Onshore Wind Power
The Trump administration has taken further steps to thwart renewable energy development, adding new directives limiting wind and solar development on federal land and at sea.
The Department of the Interior on July 29 announced a four-pronged review that continues the president’s efforts to limit some types of renewable energy.
The New York Power Authority has stepped up its renewable energy development efforts, offering a draft revision of its strategic plan that would more than double proposals to 6.8 GW.
Announced cancellations, closures and cutbacks in new manufacturing and clean energy projects in the first half of 2025 were valued at $22.1 billion by the business policy group E2.
NextEra Energy continues to present renewables as a bridge to the grid of future and fashions itself as an "all-of-the-above company" in an optimal position to build that bridge.
GE Vernova’s gas power and electrification businesses continue to surge amid growing power demand.
Large-scale solar and wind projects are facing growing local resistance along with federal policy changes.
Every Department of Interior action pertaining to wind and solar energy development must now be reviewed and approved by the Office of the Interior Secretary — after two subordinate offices separately have reviewed them and signed off.
The 10 wind farms span seven states, provide power to more than 15 off-takers, and have a gross nameplate capacity of 1.7 GW.
How deeply the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will impact clean energy still is being determined.
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