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Nine renewable energy groups, including Renewable Northwest and the Advanced Power Alliance, filed a lawsuit against the Pentagon and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.
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The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Oregon.
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The plaintiffs allege that military national security reviews for new land-based wind farms have been suspended.
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The lawsuit claims the review delays threaten $47 billion in planned investments and thousands of jobs across 21 states.
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Wind farms generate approximately 10% of electricity in the United States.
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Wind power is the largest source of renewable energy in the United States.
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Solar power is the fastest-growing renewable energy source in the United States.
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The Pentagon states that it weighs new energy development against military operational requirements.
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A military office called the siting clearinghouse assesses energy projects for national security risks.
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The siting clearinghouse continues to evaluate wind projects through a process requiring interagency coordination.
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The Pentagon reviews land-based wind energy projects as part of Federal Aviation Administration procedures.
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The plaintiffs submitted a motion requesting a court order to compel the Pentagon to resume standard project reviews.
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The plaintiffs included an economic analysis prepared by consulting firm Charles River Associates Inc.
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The Department of Defense declined to comment on cited economic impacts, citing ongoing litigation.
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The American Clean Power Association sent a letter to the Pentagon in March requesting an explanation for the suspended reviews.
Jason Grumet, Chief Executive Officer
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"The U.S. wind industry needs the government to carry out the normal review and permitting processes to keep the lights on for families and businesses."
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An economic analysis identifies 106 wind projects affected by the review delays.
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The project count only includes developments independently verified in Federal Aviation Administration records.
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The lawsuit alleges the Pentagon stopped countersigning final agreements in August 2025 and halted all review stages by April 2026.
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The first quarter of 2026 saw the lowest rate of new land-based wind power installations since 2018.
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Charles River Associates estimates the delayed projects represent more than $47 billion in capital and development expenditures.
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The estimated costs cover turbine acquisition, contractor labor, financing, grid interconnection fees, and other development expenses.
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The affected projects span 21 states, with significant concentration in Texas, Kansas, and Illinois.
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Thirteen of the 21 states with delayed projects supported Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election.
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Operational land-based wind projects exist in 43 states, Guam, and Puerto Rico.
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Fifteen states commissioned new onshore wind farms in 2025.
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Texas leads the United States in installed wind power capacity, followed by Wyoming and Oklahoma.
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Completion of the 106 delayed wind farms would add approximately 30 gigawatts of generation capacity.
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Approximately 12 gigawatts of the delayed capacity is located in Texas.
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The United States has more than 75,000 onshore wind turbines currently installed.
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Existing onshore turbines produce approximately 161 gigawatts of electricity.
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Current wind generation supplies enough electricity for over 46 million U.S. households.
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The delayed projects support an estimated 120,000 jobs across construction, supply chain, and operational sectors.
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The domestic land-based wind industry employs more than 380,000 workers nationally.
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