RWE trails potential legal action against US over offshore wind
CEO of German power giant said US cannot take payments for offshore wind project areas and then stand in way of developing them
RWE chief Markus Krebber has raised the prospect of legal action against the US over lease payments made for an offshore wind site the utility has been forced to pull the plug on amid President Donald Trump’s war on the sector.
Krebber, CEO of the German power giant and offshore wind developer, was discussing the Community Offshore Wind array it had been developing with the UK’s National Grid in the New York Bight.
The partners won a lease in a 2022 auction for the 126,000-acre (510 sq. km) area 103km south of New York's coastline, the most ever for acreage in US offshore wind.
The partners paid a record $1.1bn for that site, thought to be able to host around 3.3GW of offshore wind capacity. RWE owns a roughly 73% stake in the project, with National Grid holding the remainder.
But Krebber said he sees no need to write down the project, which has a reported book value of €800m ($937m).
"If the investment opportunity is frustrated, then we need to talk about the lease payments," he said.
"It cannot be that the federal government says, ‘I will allow you to build offshore in my waters, but in return I want payments from you’, and then once the payments have been made, it says, ‘It's no longer possible.’”