Trump Admin Cancels $765M Offshore Wind Leases, Spurs Debate on Clean Energy Rollbacks

June 17, 2026
Trump Admin Cancels $765M Offshore Wind Leases, Spurs Debate on Clean Energy Rollbacks
  • The Trump administration announced a $765 million buyback of four offshore wind leases from Invenergy, bringing total reimbursements for such deals to about $2.6 billion and allowing Invenergy to redirect funds to natural gas and geothermal projects.

  • Leading Light Wind off New Jersey was the largest canceled project, with other leases off Maine and California affected as part of the strategy.

  • Invenergy’s broader portfolio includes roughly 125 land-based wind farms, more than 60 solar projects, nearly 30 battery storage projects, and ongoing planning for additional ventures.

  • Officials argue the strategy shifts investments toward baseload power that can reliably deliver electricity, while critics say replacements won’t serve the same states or improve affordability and reliability.

  • The deal was announced on a Wednesday before mid-June, according to Law360.

  • Industry observers describe offshore wind as intermittent and unreliable in the administration’s narrative, while critics contend the deals undermine domestic wind energy development and jobs.

  • This year the administration has pursued multiple measures to rollback clean energy policies, drawing criticism from Democrats and clean-energy advocates.

  • The payout is framed as a move to redirect cash into U.S. oil and gas development.

  • Ongoing investigations and lawsuits related to the buybacks and challenges to these agreements are in play, including actions in New York and California.

  • Critics, including Turn Forward’s Hillary Bright, argue that replacing offshore wind with fossil or geothermal projects does not address regional reliability, affordability, or power gaps in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic.

  • California officials and environmental groups are likely to challenge the legality and impact of these deals, even as the state pursues offshore wind toward a 25 GW target by 2045.

  • Invenergy cites growing electricity demand—potentially up to 40% in the next decade driven by AI data centers—as a rationale for shifting toward natural gas and geothermal.

Summary based on 11 sources


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