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Trump's timeline for his attempts to destroy the US wind and Solar energy industries

U.S. president Donald Trump used his second term at the White House as a means to stymie the development of wind and sun energy facilities, which were an important part of former president Joe Biden's energy and climate agenda.

This is the timeline of his administration's actions to unravel federal funding for clean energy projects.

January 20, 2019

Trump suspended new wind energy leasing and permitting on federal lands, waters and pending federal review. This was a significant shift in U.S. Energy Policy, which had under Biden been focused on the decarbonization of the U.S. Electricity Grid by 2035.

April 17, 2019

Construction was stopped on Equinor’s offshore wind project near the New York coast by the Trump administration, claiming that it had not been properly analyzed. A month later, Interior secretary Doug Burgum permitted work to resume in an apparent compromise reached with the state, which would have seen the Constitution Natural Gas Pipeline from Pennsylvania to New York, cancelled, revived.

May 14,

Interior Department announced it would take action to reverse a Biden-era regulation that had reduced fees for solar and winds projects on federal land, increasing costs for the developers.

July 4, 2014

Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law, a massive spending and tax package that ended wind and solar energy subsidies years earlier than expected. Analysts, project developers and manufacturers predicted that the legislation would reduce the amount of renewable energy installed in the United States over the next decade. It also said it would kill jobs and investment within the clean energy manufacturing industry, which supports them.

July 17, 2017

Interior Department has announced new layers of approval for solar and wind power projects on federal land. This includes top-level officials' signatures.

August 6, 2008

Interior Department cancels Biden Administration's approval for the 1,000 megawatt Lava Ridge Wind Project in Idaho, citing community opposition and legal deficiencies.

August 7, 2008

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that it will end a $7-billion grant program that aimed to expand solar power to low income communities. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin stated that his agency does not have the authority to administer this program since the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

August 15, 2015

The Treasury Department has released rules that will make it more difficult for wind and solar project owners to claim tax credits under the OBBBA. These changes were made in response to a July executive order Trump gave to the agency directing it to restrict eligibility for tax credits.

August 18,

Brooke Rollins, Agriculture Secretary, said that her agency will no longer support solar and wind projects on productive farmland. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a day later that it would increase scrutiny of certain solar and wind energy projects, but did not end all support from the agency for clean energy projects in U.S. farmland.

August 21

Commerce Department began an investigation of imported wind turbine parts, citing potential national security threats. According to Wood Mackenzie, about two-thirds the value of an average U.S. Wind Turbine is imported.

August 22

The U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has ordered Danish company Orsted, which is already 80% complete on the wind farm near Rhode Island's coast, to cease work. BOEM cited concerns about national security that were not specified.

August 25,

The administration announced that it would revoke US Wind's approvals of its offshore wind project near the Maryland coast in the next few weeks. The U.S. Department of Justice made the statement in a filing in a lawsuit against the government's approval of the planned facility. (Reporting and editing by Stephen Coates; Nichola Groom)

(source: Reuters)