US challenges Maryland offshore wind approval in court

September 21, 2025

The United States federal government, under the direction of Donald Trump, has challenged a planned Maryland offshore wind project approval in court. The Trump administration has signed into law several executive orders aimed at reducing the standing of renewable energies in the United States. The Trump administration has implemented a new approach to the energy sector that sees the traditional gas and coal sectors being favored instead of the wind and solar power sectors that have become more popular in recent years.

U.S. Wind alleges federal officials were under pressure from the Trump administration

A recent court filing has revealed that the Trump administration filed a request to a federal court to vacate a permit approved for US Wind’s proposed Maryland Offshore Wind project. The project could have a significant impact on the energy sector in the United States and has the capacity to provide enough electricity to power 718,000 homes. So why the filing from the Trump administration, you ask?

That filing states that US Wind’s project could create issues with search and rescue operations and commercial fisheries. If that sounds like a stretch to you, you are not alone. Several key players in the energy sector have come out to state their disapproval with the court filing by the Trump administration, claiming the only reason the current administration made the filing was because the project gained approval from the Biden administration.

The action was filed in the US District Court for the District of Maryland in Baltimore, and the Trump administration has been hard at work trying to find a feasible reason for asking the court to cease the approval process. The filing stated that the previous administration misinterpreted the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, which enabled the government to manage several key projects in federal waters across the country.

US Wind fights back against the recent action taken by the Trump administration

US Wind is not going to sit by and watch one of its most promising projects being taken away by the Trump administration, and has filed motions to dismiss parts of the suit and requested extensions for responses to the amended complaint.

“Political pressure was applied to the Federal Defendants’ decisionmakers, and the pressure caused those decisionmakers to rely on improper factors,” U.S. Wind alleged in the filing.

The company has claimed that the suit is a part of the Trump administration’s coordinated efforts to repeal any and all projects set up during the previous administration. U.S. Wind received approval to begin construction for the Maryland project in December 2024 and took pride in the fact that the project was the 10th commercial-scale wind project approved in the U.S. The evidence suggests that Trump has a personal vendetta against large wind farms.

The suit has local politicians split as to whether this is the right move for the energy sector in the United States. In August of this year, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced it was pulling $679 million from offshore wind projects nationwide. Maryland House Republicans praised the administration’s decision to revoke the permit and stated the project was “a bad idea that was never going to come to fruition.”

Is there a common ground to be found in this very complicated case in Maryland

The Trump administration’s efforts to halt the transition to renewable energy for America are now becoming too big to ignore. When a multi-billion-dollar project is in danger, the relevant stakeholders are forced to reconsider their investments and possibly pull out of the energy market in the United States. That would have catastrophic consequences for the average American. One questions the current administration’s agenda as significant innovations have taken place in the wind power sector recently.

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