Home / Environment / Judge Halts US Block on Offshore Wind Project
Judge Halts US Block on Offshore Wind Project
28 Jan
Summary
- Judge allowed Vineyard Wind project to continue construction.
- National security concerns cited by administration were questioned.
- Vineyard Wind is nearly complete and partially operational.

A federal judge has halted a Trump administration stop-work order for the Vineyard Wind project, allowing its completion. U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy cited significant potential economic losses from delays and the project's strong likelihood of success in its legal challenge.
The Vineyard Wind project, located off the coast of Massachusetts, is nearly finished and partially operational. It is designed to produce nearly 600 megawatts of power for the New England grid, enough for approximately 400,000 homes. The project is a joint venture between Avangrid and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners.
This ruling follows similar decisions in federal court for three other East Coast offshore wind projects: Revolution Wind, Empire Wind, and Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind. The administration had frozen construction on five projects days before Christmas, citing national security concerns, but courts have largely sided with developers.




