Houston Chronicle

Trump’s offshore oil ban to halt wind farms too

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

President Donald Trump’s decision to rule out energy developmen­t along the coasts of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas will bar not just offshore oil and gas drilling — but coastal wind farms too.

The broad reach of Trump’s recent orders, which was confirmed by the Interior Department agency that oversees offshore energy developmen­t, comes as renewable developers are spending hundreds of millions of dollars snapping up the rights to build wind farms along the East Coast.

At issue are recent Trump memos ruling out new oil and gas leasing along Florida, Georgia and South and North Carolina from July 1, 2022 until June 30, 2032, issued after some Republican­s pressed for a drilling ban and as the president courts voters concerned about the environmen­t. On Friday, Trump said he would expand the offshore energy moratorium to include Virginia, though he has not yet issueda directive encompassi­ng the territory.

On the campaign trail, Trump highlighte­d his moves as a way to block offshore oil and gas drilling, even though the orders will affect future sale of renewable energy rights in U.S. coastal waters too.

“The withdrawal includes all energy leasing, including convention­al and renewable energy, beginning on July1, 2022,” Bureau of Ocean Energy Management spokeswoma­n Tracey Moriarty said by email.

Existing offshore energy leases are not set to be affected by the orders, including existing wind farm rights off the coasts of Virginia and North Carolina. But the offshore energy bans could imperil a new wave of offshore wind developmen­t, thwarting developers that were looking at potential opportunit­ies off the South Carolina coast as a way to provide more renewable power to the southeast U.S.

The approach is being condemned by both oil drilling and wind energy advocates.

Erik Milito, president of the National Ocean Industries Associatio­n that represents offshore wind developers, said the bans threaten “tens of thousands of additional jobs and billions of dollars of investment are expected through a prospectiv­e wind lease offshore the Carolinas.”

“Companies are already spending millions of dollars investing in wind projects offshore Virginia and North Carolina,” Milito said by email. “Limiting the geographic scope of Atlantic wind developmen­t is not just amissed opportunit­y for the areas immediatel­y onshore, it limits the ability of a new source of American energy production to grow and innovate.”

Trump’s leasing bans could be difficult for a future president to undo. A federal district court has rejected Trump’s attempt to overturn an Arctic oil leasing blockade that former President Barack Obama imposed using the same legal authority. The matter is now before a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit.

Offshore wind developers with active leases off the East Coast include Avangrid, Mayflower Wind Energy, Equinor Wind and Vineyard Wind.

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