Thursday, July 17, 2025

Trump Blocks Wind and Solar Projects



Solar and Wind Energy Projects must now get Interior Secretary Doug Burgum’s (R) Personal Sign-Off to receive Permits across the hundreds of millions of Federal acres under His Department’s Control.

The Interior Directive puts Wind and Solar Projects under heightened Scrutiny, potentially Slowing Approvals and Construction, across vast swaths of some of the most Sun and Wind rich portions of the Country. The Memo was sent to Interior Staff.

The move comes as Trump (R) has sought to Clamp Down on Wind and Solar Subsidies, even after Moderate Republicans in the Senate preserved some Federal Tax Credits for those Energy Sources in their recently Enacted Mega Law.

Gregory Wischer (R), Interior’s Deputy Chief-of-Staff for Policy, wrote in the Memo that “all decisions, actions, consultations, and other undertakings — including but not limited to the following — related to wind and solar energy facilities” require Burgum’s Review. The Actions triggering Burgum’s attention, ranging from Scoping Reports to Access Road Authorizations, to Cost Recovery Agreements.

Wischer said in the Memo, the Steps are necessary to align with various Trump Administration Executive Orders, including Trump’s Inauguration Day Declaration of a National Energy Emergency, that called on steering Federal Resources to produce more Energy, but did Not define Wind and Solar as Energy sources.

Eric Beightel (D), former Executive Director of the Federal Permitting Council under Biden (D), said the Directive would definitely Slow Down Approvals for these Renewable Energy Projects. “It absolutely will create so much bureaucratic process that no solar or wind projects are likely to move in a timely and efficient manner, if at all,” Hhe said. “For an administration so focused on eliminating unnecessary roadblocks, this is a clear attempt to use ‘the process’ to kill projects.”

The Interior Memo said its Actions were also intended to align Egency Policy with Trump’s Executive Order earlier this month to “strictly enforce” the Wind and Solar Tax Credit Phaseouts in the Mega Law, including by potentially Rewriting long-standing Rules that Define when a Project is considered to have Started Construction.

The Executive Order also directed the Interior Department to Review All of its Regulations and Guidance within 45 days to “determine whether any provide preferential treatment to wind and solar facilities in comparison to dispatchable energy sources.”

Democratic Administrations had sought to use Federal Land for Wind and Solar Development, and Bipartisan Laws like the Energy Act of 2020, which Trump Signed, explicitly encouraged it.

Federal Lands produce about 4% of U.S. Renewable Power, 8.9 gigawatts, but carry potential to provide 12.5% by 2035, according to a January Study by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory released during the Biden Administration.

That Study found Federal Lands hold Technical Potential for 5,750 gigawatts of Utility Scale Solar Power, and 875 million Acres of Land based Wind Power. When accounting for Siting concerns, such as Social, Environmental, and Technical Considerations, that Total falls significantly to 1,750 gigawatts for Solar and 70 gigawatts for Land-based Wind, the Study found.










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