From: pothead <pothead@snakebite.com>
Newsgroups: alt.global-warming,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Re: The Offshore Wind Boom Craters As Government Subsidies Vanish
Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2025 12:56:02 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: Muffler Bearings LLC
On 2025-08-16, AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> The Offshore Wind Boom Craters As Government Subsidies Vanish
>
> Offshore wind's mask finally comes off under Trump's energy policies.
> by David Blackmon
>
> August 15,2025,1:19 PM
>
> The green fairy tale now seems to be unraveling faster than a faulty wind turbine blade in a Nantucket storm.
>
> On Monday, Aug. 11,2025, Danish offshore wind giant Ãrsted dropped a bombshell, notifying the market it plans a massive rights
> issue worth up to 60 billion Danish kroner (about $9.4 billion) to prop up its flailing offshore U.S. operations.
>
> The plan, which amounts to almost 50% of Ãrsted's market cap, is a desperation move driven by the forces of reality and President
> Donald Trump's no-nonsense energy policies.
>
> Ãrsted's stock took a nosedive in the wake of Monday's announcement, cratering as much as 31.2% in Copenhagen trading, erasing
> billions in value overnight.
>
> The panic comes as the company is scrambling to fund its Sunrise Wind project - a 924-megawatt eyesore off New York's coast - and
> shore up another 8.1 gigawatts of planned capacity through 2027.
>
> Ãrsted says the cash infusion is a direct response to what it delicately calls 'material adverse developments" in the U.S. market.
>
> Translated to plain English, this means Ãrsted, whose normal business model would have involved selling a large minority share to
> investors to raise needed capital, has been unable to find any buyers as Trump's energy policy revolution takes hold.
>
> President Trump has made no bones about his disdain for the wind industry in general and offshore wind specifically. He promised
> repeatedly during his 2024 campaign to gut the offshore wind industry, citing its bogus environmental claims and visual pollution,
> and boy, has he delivered.
>
> His Day One executive orders targeted both onshore and offshore wind, freezing new leases and issuing stop-work orders. That has
> been followed by more executive branch actions targeting wind, along with language in the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act to phase out
> Biden's heavy subsidies and other preferences for the wind business.
>
> As a result, Ãrsted found itself unable to offload a stake in Sunrise Wind because no sane investor wants in on a venture that's
> now politically radioactive and never had a business model capable of surviving without heavy government subsidies.
>
> Farm-down deals like the one Ãrsted had planned now lie dead in the water in the new energy policy reality.
>
> But the truth is that Ãrsted has struggled to make a go of U.S. offshore wind for years. Back in 2023, under the Biden
> administration's subsidy-fueled frenzy, the company ate $5.6 billion in impairments on projects like Ocean Wind 1 and 2, leading to
> cancellations and a CEO ouster.
>
> Inflation, supply chain woes, and unreliable subsidies turned what was supposed to be a green gold rush into a black hole for cash.
> Now, with Trump at the helm, the mask is off.
>
> CEO Rasmus Errboe, who took over the job from Mads Nipper earlier in 2025, called the situation "extraordinary."
>
> But let's be honest: Under Mads Nipper, this company made a habit of demanding higher and higher subsidies from governments
> everywhere it operates in recent years. If anything, calling for more subsidies anytime the going gets rough seems to be a part of
> Ãrsted's core business planning.
>
> Another reality most will miss where Ãrsted is concerned is that the subsidies provided by Biden and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's
> government were just the tip of the iceberg.
>
> The Danish government owns a controlling 50.1% stake in the company, meaning Danish taxpayers are footing the bill for the majority
> of its operations in any event. If Sunrise Wind goes belly up, the Danish people will take the biggest part of the hit.
>
> Amazing, isn't it?
>
> Meanwhile, back in the U.S., Trump's suspension of new wind leases is a breath of fresh air for fishermen, whales, and anyone tired
> of seeing their coastlines industrialized for intermittent power that costs a fortune and delivers peanuts.
>
> Ãrsted's latest fiasco is emblematic of the entire renewable scam.
>
> Offshore wind is hyped by virtue-signaling politicians as the savior of the planet, but it's riddled with problems: soaring costs,
> environmental havoc (just ask the Nantucket folks suing over blade failures), and total dependence on subsidies that vanish when
> real leaders take charge.
>
> Now, the truth is staring us in the face: the offshore wind fantasy is crumbling, and it's about time. It's an industry that richly
> deserves to be put out of its misery.
Promises made.
Promises kept.
This is another Solyndra only on a huge scale. Certain people have made a lot of money off this
scam and have left the taxpayers footing the bill.
In NYS Hochul is still pushing through the no gas stove initiative yet the vast majority of
NYers don't want it.
That woman is not only incompetent and corrupt, she is evil as well.
The sooner she is out of office the sooner the state can begin to repair all the damage done.
--
pothead
"Our lives are fashioned by our choices. First we make our choices.
Then our choices make us."
-- Anne Frank