US President Donald Trump suggested that his campaign has limits to thwart wind energy, although his administration will move to stop the installation of turbines in agricultural land and coastal waters.
“We will not allow any windmills to rise unless there is a legal situation where someone has been committed long ago,” Trump said on Tuesday during the White House meeting with Cabinet officials.
Trump’s comment emphasizes the potential resolution in the approach of administration to federally allowed wind projects, with greater control – and risk – accumulates on businesses that have relatively recent authorities.
Trump has a deep, long -term reluctance to wind farms, which mocked like ugly, monstrosis killing birds. In recent weeks, however, its administration has shifted more aggressively to limit its construction, including blocking projects from getting business loans for rural development, stopping the construction of an almost completed ORSTED A/S Venture near Rhode Iceland and moving to invalidate permission for another planned project near Maryland.
The administration focused on control on coastal wind projects where it has unique strength; Businesses are planned in federal waters managed by the Ministry of the Interior and depend on the killing of the US government permission. According to former President Joe Biden the US, 11 of them approved.
Trump repeated his opposition towards wind energy on Tuesday, while mocked the solar fields he described as “large ugly black plastic spots that come from China” and are Marring Farmland. He did not get about what kind of government’s obligations would be too old to guarantee changes.
In May, however, Trump’s administration raised an earlier order to stop the work that after weeks the construction of the Equinor Asa’s Empire Wind 1 project near New York. The interior department issued a similar order to stop work on the ORSTED A/S Revolution Wind Project outside the island of Rhode Island, led to the operator of Nova England to warn a threat to the reliability of electric electricity and increase consumer costs in the region.
While orders to stop work focus on ongoing construction, the separate planned step Trump administration against the American wind project near Maryland is a much greater threat to the company of $ 6 billion, because it would invalidate the key federal permit.
Interior Minister Doug Burgum said earlier that legal considerations make it difficult to stop some planned wind projects. And he proposed a divided approach to the government review, and existing projects were treated differently than the proposed.
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(Tagstotranslate) wind energy
