Trump, whose inauguration is set for January 20, spoke in length against
wind power and stated that the US will have a policy “where no windmills are
being built” during his presidency. He called wind “the most expensive energy there is” and claimed that
wind turbines were a “disaster.”
“They litter our country, they’re littered all over our country like
dropping paper, like dropping garbage in a field. They’re rusting, rotting,
closed, and falling down. And they put new ones next to them because nobody
wants to take them down, because why should they take them down? It’s very
expensive to take them down,” Trump said during his speech.
This resulted in stocks of Danish wind turbine
manufacturer Vestas and compatriot wind developer Ørsted falling around 7% on
Wednesday following Trump’s anti-wind tirade. Siemens Energy, RWE, and Nordex
also saw a drop in stock value.
Last Friday , 3 Jan ‘25 Trump called for the UK to
dismantle its wind turbines in the North Sea in response to a decision by the
US firm Apache to leave the oil-rich region due to a windfall tax on oil
operations.
“The UK is making a very big mistake. Open up the North Sea. Get rid of
the windmills!” Trump posted on his Truth Social online platform.
Trump was not an advocate of environmental
protection or green energy at any point. Famously, or infamously, he even
pulled the United States out of the 2015 Paris climate change accord. Joe Biden
reversed that decision after he took office.
The president-elect has had a bone to pick with wind even before his
first run in office. It all stems from his
fight against the Aberdeen Bay offshore wind farm which he tried to stop by claiming
it would ruin the view from his golf resort in Aberdeen. He lost the court case
in 2015 and the offshore wind farm started operation in 2018. This fight against wind so close to Trump’s
inauguration could be seen as round two between the presidents as Biden
dealt a heavy blow to Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” oil policy by blocking all future oil and gas drilling in more than
2.5m sq km of federal waters earlier this week.
With this decision, federal oil and gas leasing was
banned across large parts of the Atlantic, Pacific, the eastern Gulf of Mexico,
and the Northern Bering Sea. In total, the ban closed off an area equal to around
a quarter of the total land mass of the United States.