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The Interior Department under the Trump administration has agreed to pay roughly $885–900 million to Bluepoint Wind and Golden State Wind to relinquish offshore wind leases and commit funds to oil, gas or LNG projects. Framed by officials as reclaiming taxpayer support for uneconomic Biden‑era projects and advancing an “Energy Dominance” agenda, the buyouts follow a prior $1 billion payout to TotalEnergies. Critics warn the unprecedented payments undermine clean‑energy goals, jobs, supply chains and may be legally dubious, while signaling a major shift in U.S. offshore energy policy with broad implications for future renewable investment and climate targets.
Federal buyouts of offshore wind leases reshape project viability, investor risk, and regulatory precedent for renewable developers and suppliers. Tech professionals supporting offshore wind (OT, cloud, sensors, turbines) must reassess demand forecasts and compliance needs.
Dossier last updated: 2026-05-12 00:17:25
The Trump administration will pay nearly $900 million to Bluepoint Wind and Golden State Wind to relinquish U.S. offshore wind leases, with both firms agreeing not to pursue future U.S. offshore projects. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum framed the reimbursements as reclaiming taxpayer support for uneconomic projects; critics including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and environmental groups call the moves harmful to jobs, clean-energy goals and potentially unlawful. The payouts follow a $1 billion refund to TotalEnergies and come amid legal battles over the administration’s attempts to block offshore wind—federal judges have struck down or limited those actions, allowing some projects to resume. The deals signal major policy and market shifts for U.S. offshore wind development.
The Trump administration announced nearly $900 million in payouts to Bluepoint Wind and Golden State Wind to relinquish U.S. offshore wind leases and agree not to pursue new domestic projects. The Interior Department said the reimbursements mirror a prior $1 billion deal with TotalEnergies and framed the moves as reversing leases won under Biden-era subsidies. Bluepoint (New Jersey/New York) and Golden State (floating project off California) are co-owned by Ocean Winds, a JV of EDP Renewables and Engie; their lease recoveries are about $765 million and $120 million respectively. Critics, including Sen. Chuck Schumer and environmental groups, argue the deals harm the economy and climate goals and favor fossil fuel interests amid ongoing court battles over prior federal actions. This matters for U.S. clean energy investment, supply chains, and the future of offshore wind development.
The U.S. Department of the Interior struck agreements to pay offshore wind leaseholders — Bluepoint Wind ($765M) and Golden State Wind ($120M) — to terminate projects if they reinvest similar sums into oil, gas or LNG infrastructure. The move follows a prior $1B-plus payout to TotalEnergies and appears to be a sustained Trump administration strategy after legal setbacks to an executive order halting new federal wind approvals. Officials frame the deals as advancing an “Energy Dominance Agenda” and lowering energy costs, but critics note they steer public funds toward fossil fuels despite renewables’ falling costs and larger long‑term subsidies for oil and gas. The policy has major implications for renewable investment, energy markets and climate goals.
The Trump administration will pay energy companies $885 million to relinquish federal leases for two planned offshore wind farms—one off New York/New Jersey and one off California—and the firms will redirect that money into oil and gas projects, including Gulf Coast LNG facilities. The Interior Department framed the buyouts as follow-ups to a similar deal with TotalEnergies, which forfeited leases for East Coast projects in exchange for committing to fossil-fuel investments. Critics say the transactions are unprecedented taxpayer-funded transfers to curtail offshore wind development, a key clean-energy technology, and may be a tactic to sidestep legal setbacks to administrative halts on wind construction. The moves could reshape U.S. offshore energy investment and renewable policy.