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Home»Offshore»Major Offshore Wind Developer has Stopped Activities in United States
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Major Offshore Wind Developer has Stopped Activities in United States

April 25, 2025
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RWE Halts Offshore Wind Projects in the U.S. Amid Trump Administration’s Moves

By Christoph Steitz

FRANKFURT, April 25 (Reuters) – One of the world’s top offshore wind developers, Germany’s RWE, has stopped work on its U.S. projects for now in light of recent moves against the industry by the Trump administration, its CEO said in a text published ahead of the firm’s annual meeting.

The comments by Markus Krebber are a heavy blow to the nascent U.S. offshore wind market, which was a key pillar of former U.S. President Joe Biden’s energy policy but which his successor Donald Trump has vowed to stop.

RWE holds three offshore wind leases in U.S. waters off the coasts of New York, Louisiana, and California.

Krebber’s remarks come a week after Norwegian peer Equinor said it would halt offshore construction of its Empire Wind I project off the coast of New York because it received a stop-work order from U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum. The agency said information suggested it had been approved without a proper environmental analysis.

“In the U.S. … we have stopped our offshore activities for the time being,” Krebber said, according to the text for the annual general meeting, which is scheduled for April 30.

“We remain cautious given the political developments,” he added.

Trump ordered a suspension of offshore wind leasing on his first day in office in January, calling wind power ugly and expensive.

RWE’s U.S. projects include the 3-gigawatt Community Offshore Wind, which is among several projects vying for a contract with New York state. The project is a joint venture with Britain’s National Grid, which is 73%-owned by the German group.

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The project was expected to start generating electricity in the early 2030s and be capable of powering more than a million homes. RWE paid $1.1 billion for the lease area in 2022.

Spokespeople for Community Offshore Wind were not immediately available for comment.

New York state is banking on large amounts of offshore wind power to reach its climate and clean energy goals. State officials were not immediately available for comment.

About half of RWE’s installed renewable capacity is based in the United States.

The company was the lone bidder in a 2023 auction of offshore wind development rights in the Gulf of Mexico, which Trump has renamed the Gulf of America, securing a lease off the coast of Louisiana for just $5.6 million.

RWE also has an offshore wind lease off the coast of Northern California. That project, called Canopy Offshore Wind, was not expected to be completed for about a decade.

RWE, Germany’s biggest power producer, said last month that it had pared back its U.S. offshore wind activities to a minimum, stopping short of saying they were on ice.

Community Offshore Wind has non-current assets with a carrying amount – calculated by deducting depreciation from the original cost – of 1.31 billion euros ($1.49 billion), according to RWE’s annual report.

($1 = 0.8804 euros)

(Reporting by Christoph Steitz in Frankfurt and Nichola Groom in San Marino, California, Editing by Miranda Murray, Ludwig Burger and Mark Potter)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2025.

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