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A judge revoked Atlantic Shores’ EPA permit, blocking NJ’s offshore wind project as Trump reverses Biden’s green policies over costs and wildlife risks.
A federal judge at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) revoked a permit for New Jersey’s first offshore wind energy farm, potentially obstructing or ending the ambitions of the project entirely. [emphasis, links added]
Environmental Appeals Court Judge Mary Kay Lynch remanded a Clean Air Act permit back to the U.S. EPA, which was issued last September to Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind.
The move closely follows President Donald Trump’s Jan. 20 memo calling for a review of the federal government’s “leasing and permitting practices for wind projects” and a temporary withdrawal of all areas on the outer continental shelf from offshore wind leasing.
The remanded permit authorized Atlantic Shores “to construct and operate two wind energy-generation projects off the coast of New Jersey,” though it will now be pending review, according to the new ruling.
EPA officials filed a motion on Feb. 28 to have the court remand the offshore wind permit, so that the agency could reevaluate the project’s environmental impacts.
The EPA, now led by Administrator Lee Zeldin, has taken several actions within the past month alone to eliminate climate and renewable green energy initiatives that were greenlit under previous presidential administrations.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities granted Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind a contract in 2021 for 1.5 megawatts of renewable energy to be generated in a facility off the coast of Atlantic City.
Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind is a renewable energy company with “three offshore wind energy lease areas totaling more than 400 square miles under active development,” according to its website.
Friday’s court decision seems to cast a grim shadow on the future of the project. …snip…
Protests erupted over the offshore wind farms between 2023 and 2025, as protesters raised concerns over high-powered cables running through residential neighborhoods and dead whales and dolphins washing up on the Jersey Shore.
Wind turbines off the coast of New England have also previously shed debris into the ocean, prompting environmentalists’ concerns for wildlife.
This is not the first hurdle for the Atlantic Shores project, as Shell pulled its planned $1 billion investment in January of this year.
A few days later, New Jersey’s Board of Public Utilities abandoned plans for a fourth offshore wind solicitation for bids.
This effectively ended the expansion of Atlantic Shores. …snip…
Trump moved quickly to reverse several of former President Joe Biden’s green energy policies, invoking a freeze on permits for and construction of new wind projects on federal land and waters.
The Biden administration supported and subsidized efforts to meet its goal of 30 gigawatts of offshore energy by 2030, though the push reeled as inflation, high interest rates, and logistics forced postponements and cancellations of major projects.
The administration also championed the Inflation Reduction Act, a more than $1 trillion climate bill.
Trump’s Jan. 20 memo cites “environmental impact and cost to surrounding communities of defunct and idle windmills” as major concerns surrounding offshore wind farms.
Allegations of deadly impacts on whales and other marine mammals have also made headlines.
Read full post at Daily Caller
The post Judge Blocks NJ Offshore Wind Farm As Trump Reverses Biden’s Green Gambits appeared first on Energy News Beat.
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