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Sunrise Wind project in New York can resume after court rejects pause
Summary
A federal judge allowed construction to resume on the Sunrise Wind offshore project, concluding the government did not show an imminent national security risk; the farm is about 45% complete and expected to begin operations in 2027.
Content
A federal judge cleared the way for the Sunrise Wind offshore project to resume construction off Long Island, finding the government had not demonstrated an imminent national security risk. The project was paused in December by the Trump administration along with four other East Coast wind projects. Danish company Orsted and others sued to challenge the stop-work order. Sunrise Wind is reported to be roughly 45% complete and said it would resume work as soon as possible.
What is known:
- U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth ruled the government did not show that offshore wind posed an immediate national security threat in this case.
- The article says the pause was ordered by the Trump administration in December and cited national security concerns; a White House spokesperson characterized the pause as protecting national security.
- Danish developer Orsted sued the administration over the halts, and the company is named in court filings about Sunrise Wind and related projects.
- Sunrise Wind is described as about 45% complete, capable of generating 924 megawatts, enough to power about 600,000 New York homes, and is expected to be operational in 2027.
- The project reported that the stop-work order was costing at least $1.25 million per day and said delays risked greater financial harm.
Summary:
The ruling allows construction to restart and keeps Sunrise Wind on its previously reported timeline toward 2027 operation. It follows similar court decisions that have permitted other paused East Coast offshore wind projects to resume. Undetermined at this time
