- Weak yuan, Trump tariff threats confound Beijing's economic puzzle
- Sinner destined for greatness -- but first comes doping hearing
- Japan's Osaka bans street smoking ahead of Expo 2025
- Mahomes and Chiefs eye historic Super Bowl 'three-peat' after beating Bills
- Asian stocks mixed as tariff fears return, new AI programme emerges
- ECB to cut rates again, with a nervous eye on Trump
- Thunder hold off Trail Blazers for bounce-back win
- Bittersweet return for Syrians with killed, missing relatives
- Lebanon says will extend ceasefire despite Israel's failure to withdraw troops
- With Trump win, Silicon Valley's right flank takes on Washington
- Trump slaps tariffs, sanctions as Colombia defies deportation push
- Gunfire in DR Congo's Goma as Kenya pushes peace talks
- New film claims 'Napalm Girl' photo credited to wrong journalist
- Eagles reach Super Bowl with 55-23 win over Commanders
- Amorim says 63-year-old coach better chance of playing than Rashford
- Barcelona hit seven past Valencia to restore La Liga push
- Universal, Spotify ink multi-year deal
- Trump, Colombia wage tariff war amid US immigration row
- Barca shred Valencia to restore La Liga shine
- Marseille miss chance to close gap on PSG with Nice defeat
- Man Utd must improve after 'lucky' Fulham win, says Amorim
- Postecoglou under fire as Leicester stun Spurs, Man Utd win at Fulham
- Gunfire in DR Congo's Goma as pro-Rwanda forces close in
- Man Utd grind out Fulham win thanks to Martinez winner
- Villa boss Emery interested in reunion with Villarreal's Foyth
- Lukashenko extends three-decade Belarus rule, West denounces vote
- Palestinian voices take center stage at Sundance
- Trump slaps sanctions after Colombia defies deportation push
- DR Congo urges UN to punish Rwanda for 'declaration of war'
- Mel Gibson's 'Flight Risk' lands atop N.America box office
- Inter thump Lecce to stay in touch with Serie A leaders Napoli
- Postecoglou under fire as Leicester stun Spurs, West Ham hold Villa
- Lukashenko extends three-decade rule in election denounced by West
- Lukashenko extends three-decade rule in election deonounced by West
- 'Who knows?': Postecoglou uncertain over future after new 'low' for Spurs
- Undersea cable between Sweden and Latvia damaged, both countries say
- Undersea cable between Sweden and Latvia damaged: Swedish PM
- Colombia to block US deportation flights amid growing LatAm pushback
- Son slams 'sloppy' Spurs as pressure mounts on Postecoglou
- Lebanon says Israeli forces kill 22 in south on pullout deadline
- Hoffenheim snatch last-gasp draw against Frankfurt
- Trump's first week: everything, everywhere, all at once
- Postecoglou under fire as Leicester stun troubled Spurs
- Idao de Tillard defends Prix d'Amerique crown for father and son
- UN chief calls for Rwanda to stop advance on key DR Congo city
- Van der Poel gears up for worlds with cyclo-cross double
- Israeli forces kill 15 in south Lebanon on pullout deadline
- Lukashenko set to extend three-decade rule in Belarus
- Sudan army chief visits HQ after recapture from paramilitaries
- Sinner says clear mind over doping saga helped him win in Melbourne
Trump casts chill over US wind energy sector
Donald Trump has long ranted against wind energy -- claiming turbines are unsightly, dangerous to wildlife and too expensive -- with him threatening to upend decades of industry progress just a few hours after resuming power.
"We're not going to do the wind thing," Trump said Monday as he returned to the Oval Office for the first time in four years as commander-in-chief.
"Big, ugly windmills," he said as he signed a series of executive orders that has brought the sector into crisis, adding that "they kill your birds, and they ruin your beautiful landscape."
Among the measures were a temporary freeze on federal permitting and loans for all offshore and onshore wind projects.
Jason Grumet, president of the American Clean Power Association (ACP), quickly slammed the move, saying it "increases bureaucratic barriers, undermining domestic energy development and harming American businesses and workers."
After the announcements, wind-related stocks fell into the red.
"It's had a real cooling effect on the sector," Elizabeth Wilson, an offshore wind specialist at Dartmouth University, told AFP.
Conflict-weary developers are already "backing away from some of these projects," she said.
Coming at the same time as he has declared a "national energy emergency," some observers have noted a contradiction in Trump's assault on wind energy.
Though not as robust as in Europe, wind energy in 2023 accounted for some 10 percent of US electricity production -- more than twice as much as solar.
Onshore wind power is also relatively inexpensive, according to experts, with the price per megawatt-hour ranging from $27 to $73 in 2024, far less than nuclear or coal -- though rates could fluctuate in the future.
Ember, an energy think tank, warned on Thursday that the United States "risks being left behind in the clean industrial revolution" as major economies such as China are increasingly "embracing wind as a source of cheap, clean electricity."
It remains to be seen what the longterm effects of Trump's actions will have on the sector, which has already faced struggles in the United States in recent years due to rising costs from inflation and interest rates, along with mounting local opposition to projects.
The offshore wind industry, still in its infancy in the United States, is likely to be the hardest hit, according to Wilson, as the majority of exploitable marine areas are in federal waters subject to Trump's measures.
However, "most of the onshore development happens on private lands where the federal government doesn't really have any control," she added.
- 'I don't want even one built' -
Days before taking office, Trump wrote on his Truth Social media platform: "I don't want even one (windmill) built during my Administration."
That pledge has seriously spooked the sector, which is worried he could permanently block subsidies or the environmental approvals needed for certain projects.
Such moves would likely be challenged in court and prompt political backlash.
"Ninety-nine percent of onshore wind power projects are on private lands, and the private landowners generally like these wind farms, and they get a lot of economic benefit from them," said Michigan Technological University professor emeritus Barry Solomon.
He noted that the projects are also largely in Republican-led states such as Texas, Oklahoma, Iowa, Kansas and the Dakotas.
The ACP also warned that restricting wind development would "increase consumer energy bills."
Despite the headwinds, some experts remain optimistic.
"Ultimately... the economics is driving the desire for wind and solar," said University of Delaware professor Jeremy Firestone.
With artificial intelligence, he added, energy needs "are increasing a great deal. So there's going to be a lot of pressure to continue to build out wind turbines."
T.Perez--AT