US Judge Set to Rule on Equinor’s Bid to Restart Offshore Wind Project

January 15, 2026

US Judge Set to Rule on Equinor’s Bid to Restart Offshore Wind Project
The christening of the US-built service operations vessel ECO Liberty in June 2025 (Credit: Brian Young/Equinor)

A U.S. judge will rule on Thursday on whether to allow Norwegian offshore wind developer Equinor to resume construction of the Empire Wind project off the coast of New York in a lawsuit over the Trump administration's suspension of the industry.

U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols in Washington had declined to issue an immediate ruling at a hearing on Wednesday, two days after the same court ruled Danish offshore wind developer Orsted could restart work on its nearly completed Revolution Wind project off Rhode Island.

The telephonic hearing will take place at 11 a.m. (1600 GMT) local time, according to the court.

The court decisions in these cases hold high stakes for companies and their shareholders because they could allow multi-billion-dollar projects to be completed, but the underlying lawsuits and the administration's aversion to offshore wind will continue to create uncertainty.


Five Projects Paused


Equinor's request for an injunction, which would allow work to continue while the lawsuit proceeds, is the latest in a string of legal challenges to U.S. President Donald Trump's all-of-government opposition to the offshore wind sector.

Trump's Interior Department last month paused activity on five offshore wind leases, citing new classified information on risks to national security from radar interference.

During the hour-long hearing, Empire Wind attorney Ann Navaro said the pause created an "existential risk" for the company, and that it could lose access to construction vessels it needs to complete the $5.5 billion project.

U.S. Department of Justice attorney Stanley Woodward, arguing for the administration, said national security concerns justified the halt and argued the "parade of horribles" Empire Wind said would result from the pause was "speculative."

Nichols questioned whether the government's national security concerns would apply during construction of the project as opposed to during operations. Empire Wind said the project is not slated to start operations until October.

The judge, who was appointed by Trump during his first term, also raised the possibility of temporarily halting the pause before ruling on the merits of the case in an expedited proceeding.

Equinor has spent $4 billion on its project, and said in court papers that it faces likely termination if it cannot proceed by January 16.

Empire Wind is located 20 miles (32 km) off the coast of Long Island and is about 60% complete. It is expected to produce electricity to power about 500,000 homes.

Offshore wind developers, including Equinor, have faced repeated disruptions under Trump, who says wind turbines are ugly, expensive and inefficient. Empire Wind was halted previously by the administration for a month last year.


(Reuters - Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington and Nichola Groom in Los Angeles; Editing by Alistair Bell, Rod Nickel and Diane Craft)

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