Overview
- U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth granted a preliminary injunction in Washington, D.C., allowing construction to restart on the 704‑megawatt project off Rhode Island.
- BOEM had ordered work stopped on Aug. 22, citing unspecified national security concerns that remain under government review.
- Federal attorneys argued the developers failed to meet permit conditions requiring coordination with the Navy and NOAA, a claim the companies dispute.
- The project is about 80% complete with more than 1,000 workers on site, and delays threaten the availability of a specialized installation vessel after December.
- Ørsted says roughly $5 billion has been spent or committed, daily losses reach about $2–2.3 million during a pause, and Rhode Island and Connecticut have also filed lawsuits challenging the stop‑work order.