Federal Shipping Regulations Sank One of America's Biggest Offshore Wind Projects
Yup, blame the Jones Act. Again.

Construction of an offshore wind farm that had the potential to power more than a half-million homes was canceled in late October, and a famously bad federal shipping regulation seems to be the prime culprit.
When Ørsted pulled the plug on the Ocean Wind project that was planned for the New Jersey coast, the Danish energy firm said in a statement that the decision was driven by "high inflation, rising interest rates, and supply chain bottlenecks."
While some of those things are obviously beyond the immediate control of American policy makers, subsequent reporting on Ørsted's decision to abruptly cancel the project suggests that one factor stood out above the rest. The decision was "based in large part on big delays securing the ship it needed to build the project," Reuters reported last month, citing company officials.
That Reuters report doesn't include a specific mention of the Jones Act—the century-old law that effectively bans foreign-built ships from operating between American ports, and that subsequently drives up the cost of shipbuilding and shipping in the United States—but the subtext is pretty clear. In a call with reporters a few days after the project was canceled, Ørsted CEO Mads Nipper cited "significant delays on vessel availability" caused "a situation where we would need to go out and recontract all or very large scopes of the project at expectedly higher prices."
That's what the Jones Act does. As Reason has reported on many other occasions, the Jones Act is a nakedly protectionist law that severely limits competition in the American shipping market by requiring that ships operating between U.S. ports are American-built, American-crewed, and American-flagged.
Building offshore wind farms requires ships that can deliver supplies to the construction site and some specialty ships that serve as a base for building the turbines. While there are plenty of ships around the rest of the world that can do that work, companies like Ørsted can't use those ships to build wind farms in American coastal waters.
"The Jones Act has essentially created a situation where so many vessels involved in the offshore wind installation process need to be built here, and right now there is only one. So that's a huge constraint," explained Chelsea Jean-Michel, an offshore wind analyst, in a recent episode of Bloomberg's Odd Lots podcast.
Yes, there's just one: a wind turbine installation vessel (WTIV) currently under construction in Texas, which Dominion Energy plans to use to build a wind farm off the coast of Virginia. As Jean-Michel explained, Ørsted hoped to lease it for its own project near New Jersey. But construction of that one, lone American WTIV has been delayed and costs have ballooned.
Colin Grabow, a trade policy expert with the Cato Institute (and notable Jones Act critic) points out to Reason that the original price tag for the ship was about $500 million, but that has risen to about $625 million in recent estimates. Meanwhile, the ship was expected to be finished this year, but delivery is now expected late next year or in early 2025.
"It's difficult to undertake such projects in an efficient manner when the Jones Act–compliant vessels needed for their construction are plagued by rising costs and—in the case of Ocean Wind 1 and 2—don't even exist," Grabow tells Reason.
Indeed, higher fixed costs on things like installation ships might have been manageable—even while being wasteful—with low interest rates. In the current environment, however, it makes sense that energy companies would rethink how they are allocating those investments. It seems like that's exactly what Ørsted did. There are plenty of other countries around the world where it could invest in building offshore wind and not have those projects hobbled by the Jones Act.
What happened with the Ocean Wind project is yet another reminder that the federal government's own rules are the biggest stumbling block to the Biden administration's stated goal of having America produce 30 gigawatts of electricity from offshore wind by 2030.
Faced with the impediments created by the Jones Act, some companies are developing inefficient workarounds, like the Feederdock: a fixed installation vessel that can be served by Jones Act–compliant tug boats bringing supplies from the mainland. There have also been some small cracks in the Jones Act's prohibition against using foreign-built ships for offshore wind projects. Last year, U.S. Customs and Border Protection ruled that foreign-built ships could move crews and work materials to an offshore construction site without violating the Jones Act, which applies only to ships moving "passengers" and "merchandise."
Markets tend to find a way, but the cost of the Jones Act's protectionism is America getting less renewable energy from offshore wind farms that will cost more and take longer to build.
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Ocean Wind was not able to sail through the regulations.
Jones Act breaks Wind. Boehm plays He Who Smelt It with Reason readers.
All they would have had to do is park Chris Chrispie Kreme off shore and every time he breaks wind the energy level would soar.
whales and birds rejoice!
Exactly. The headline should be “Jones Act saves Jersey shore views and wildlife.”
Or ‘wild’ life.
One useless and inefficient crony federal law stopping another.
I am confused, is this win-win, or lose-lose?
This is more of Modern Libertarianisms take on Freedom:
We need to reduce the barriers and increase the affordability of our useless, environmentally harmful mandated Green New Deal energy projects.
We have to have ducts in our apartments, we should be able to choose the style and colour.
Federal Shipping Regulations Sank One of America's Biggest Offshore Wind Projects
Yup, blame the Jones Act. Again.
Was this designed to make me hate the Jones Act, because you keep making me like the Jones Act.
Remember the discussion about how the GND was sold as “Buy into saving the environment and support American jobs!” and, when it got rejected, we got (agree-to-disagree) “You’ll get the GND (and like it) and we’ll send the tax dollars and jobs somewhere else.”?
Boehm seems upset that the latter policy isn’t going to work out.
This. Newfound appreciation for the Jones Act.
More like credit the Jones Act in this case, right? And was Ørsted not aware of the Jones Act till now? Did they think they could get a low bid in and then just bribe a few people?
I re-read the article twice, and it was yet another sermon "Inflation, economic conditions, COVID supply chain shit..."
*looks up to congregation*
"And this rather reminds me of
our Lord JesusThe Jones Act"Uh, credit The Jones Act the way I credit the border for combating or pushing back against unchecked welfare growth? Sure.
Like The Jones Act inasmuch as I don’t like subsidizing Chinese solar panels and lithium, the GND, or eating bugs? Yes, Like The Jones Act (and like Chinese, Russian, etc. defense of fossil fuel consumption over the GND in turn).
Once again, the funny thing about The Jones Act is that, like borders, it’s not really insane and the equivalent gets baked in all over the place (we don’t give school vouchers/DOE funds to vast networks of Chinese-owned schools staffed by Chinese citizens, we don’t give healthcare dollars to Russian-owned hospitals staffed by Russian citizens). The primary problem with it is that it offends anti-American, self-hating white people who think anyone who’s brown and speaks Spanish or Arabic has never colonized anywhere and is, therefore, owed recognition of their moral superiority by all people.
Please note: "Potential to power over a half-million homes" does not mean it will. I have sent countless responses to articles such as this asking a simple question: Has ANYONE ACTUALLY READ THE PERMIT APPLICATIONS FOR THESE WIND FARMS?? Vineyard Wind, Southfork Wind, Block Island Wind and Founders Homestead (a solar site, Middletown, RI) have one thing in common: No science behind their claims. Installed facilities: BI Wind: 30 MW claimed, ~8.5ME actual (eia.gov). Founders: 4.5 MW claim, ~.7MW actual (again, eia.gov). They simply provide the maximum theoretical output in the proposal apparently hoping no one asks or checks. And, no one does. Ever. And, the facilities themselves never publish the generation data. Ever. I can't believe that, with all the finger pointing, political zeal, cross-aisle hating, agenda-life-support-chest-pounding I view on this and virtually every other "journalism site" no one apparently feels inclined to ask or research the fundamentals. Pretty funny, actually.- Paul
Note to self: when embarking on a multi-kajillion dollar project that requires logistics and shipping to US shores, take note of a law that’s been in effect since 1920 before you embark.
Note to self: when embarking on a multi-kajillion dollar project that requires logistics and shipping to US shores, take note of a law that’s been in effect since 1920 before you embark.
Not to be too pragmatic or objectivist or due diligence-y or anything, but probably a decent idea to look into the actual logistics of the number of boats to support your project regardless of the law too.
A lot of foreign operators come into the USA looking to do the kinds of projects that the "progressives" claim to love, and end up slinking home with their tails tucked once they get deep enough in to get a peek behind the curtain as to how the governments here intend to obstruct and prevent any actual productivity in order to be "hands on" with the operations, or how much "red tape" is involved in just getting a handle on the layer of red tape which covers the third tier of red tape before anyone can get to a discussion about maybe breaking ground or turning a bolt in some phase of construction.
I think that at various times there were both French and Chinese firms offering to help show the California HSR board how to actually construct a working and usable train system, and both tapped out before getting to a point where they were within shouting distance of getting into a room with someone who probably wouldn't have listened to them anyway.
"The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: "I'm from the government and I'm here to help." -- Ronald Reagan.
Speaking of our precious environment, ABC News kind-of-sort-of realizes that the entire recycling system in this country, and the world is a scam, and comes within a millimeter of admitting it.
I used to think, up until COVID, that recycling in my area was actually being recycled. I knew the recycling plant that my waste was hypothetically being taken to. I've seen it, with my own eyes, and I know that some stuff actually does get processed there.
But then lockdown happened. Recycling was temporarily suspended, but when it was brought back, I was home frequently enough to just watch the people collecting recycling dumping my bin into the same garbage truck as the rest of my non-recyclable waste. So at that point I really stopped giving a shit.
Aluminum is about the only thing that's worth actually recycling. Possibly glass as well, though actual reusable glass bottles are really the way to go there.
If only. Copper theft is a massive cost to my company because its actually worth "recycling".
Not a lot of post-consumer trash is heavy on copper, and a most cities now have "e-waste" collection for stuff that is. I'd be surprised if any sanitation-related recycling facilities are actually set up to process copper for recycling.
I don't understand why "environmentalists" don't want plastic in landfill. It's the most effective and widespread "carbon capture" method we have, guaranteeing that carbon from fossil fuels won't be released for a long, long time.
Hurray for the Jones Act. Now I wonder if all that stolen money for windmills will get returned or at least pay down some debt.
You can stop wondering. It won't.
lol.... Well said.
Something good came from it
The path to wisdom is paved with reality:
.
Wind Power’s a fraud, don’t you know?
‘Cause a subsidy’s what makes it go.
Greens cry, “Give us your trust!”
But their program’s a bust,
‘Cause so often the wind doesn’t blow.
The only things that blow are John kerry and Algore.
So Kerry and Gore are now going to lobby their fellow Dems to repeal the Jones Act?
They’ll just lobby for a ‘green’ exception.
They’ll be jonesing to amend it.
Federal Shipping Regulations Sank One of America's Biggest Offshore Wind Projects
Yup, blame the Jones Act. Again.
Blame? I credit the Jones Act for stopping a stupid, environmentally destructive, government-subsidized uneconomic boondoggle.
Along with all the other taxpayer funded/subsidized boondoggles like the F-35, V-22 Ospray, That is you pray every time you climb into one.
William Proxmire could write a dozen more "Golden Fleece Awards".
Federal Shipping Regulations Sank One of America's Biggest Offshore Wind Projects Yup, blame the Jones Act. Again.
An unexpected benefit!
An article I read about the cancellation also mentioned that the Swedish company said there wasn't enough subsidies.
But just as more importantly is what was going to happen to the wind turbines when the turbines would reach end of life. Because of hurricanes and such more than twice the amount of concrete and other material like steel was needed. Little of which was recyclable.
Yeah, Yeah. Let's cheer on useless red tape because 'windmills bad oil good'.
When you’re spending other people’s capital with only religious-level promises of future payouts, is there anything that’s not useless red tape?
You should take a drive out to Texas and check out all the recent bone yards filled with broken wind turbine parts and pieces. Lots and lots of broken parts and pieces.
None of it recycleable.
I don't see a problem here. Green Energy or more rightly called "Grift Energy" is the greatest fraud of the century . There is nothing green about "Green Energy". It requires production of materials that are not recyclable, hence the huge yards filled with broken wind turbines and damaged solar cells. Furthermore wind turbines require a great deal of synthetic materials. And they're useless, wasteful and break down quite often.
But they're highly profitable to the companies that produce these products and the salespeople who manage to persuade local communities they need to get with the program and go wind power.
Thanks to grifters such as Algore and Lurch/John kerry and a host of other ignorant, wannabe little dictators who would like to see all of us sitting in our little pods, eating bugs and owning nothing.
Green energy is a scam. A lie that has only made some people rich. Solar is a failure, wind energy is a failure and a blight on the landscape, so there goes your" what about the environment" whistle.
Glad to see this scam failing.
Well that's one money pit we won't be pouring money into. Yay!