Don Trump Tilts at Windmills: Rescinds All Offshore Wind Energy Areas in the US; current leases up for review
- By Pommer
- American Politics
- 50 Replies
Here’s that document you requested via FOIA, psych!Trump admin redacts entire Empire Wind study
The administration blacked out 27 pages of findings in a document the Interior secretary cited when he ordered a work stoppage on the offshore wind project.
Transparency!
The Trump administration has repeatedly refused to release the NOAA study Burgum cited in April as justification for halting Empire Wind I, which had all of its permits. Construction later restarted after President Donald Trump said he made a deal to boost natural gas pipeline capacity in New York.
The Interior Department, in response to a formal request by POLITICO’s E&E News for the study under the federal Freedom of Information Act, sent a copy of the report that was almost entirely blacked out with redactions. In all, 27 full pages were redacted.
Daniel Bettinger, a co-founder of TurbineHub, a data company for renewable energy investors and developers, also sought the NOAA records and received the same blacked-out version.
He said in an interview that he wanted details of the report to help his clients gain insight into the workings of the government’s permitting offices.
“Ultimately, what we’re trying to do and what needs to be there is a transparency and ability to gauge predictability for these projects to be underwritten,” Bettinger said. “When we bring in these kind of non-transparent and unclear decisions and certain reports that are redacted, it just brings a lot of doubt into the total U.S. energy market.”
It should be pretty clear, you need to make a 'deal' with President Trump, and then you get your permit. What could be simpler?
EDIT:
“If the permitting for the project had actually been rushed or had any issues with it, as the Trump administration has claimed, then why would the administration hide every single word from the 27 pages of findings in the report?” asked Matt Walker, who advocates for renewable power at the NRDC, an environmental group. “It makes one seriously question if there were truly any legal or factual issues with the project review that would have justified the stop work order.”
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