| Such a clever administration.... 
 Trump administration cancels largest solar project in United States
 The  Bureau of Land Management has officially cancelled the Esmeralda 7  solar project, a Nevada-based project that would stand among the world’s  largest solar power plants, large enough to power nearly 2 million  homes.
 October 10, 2025
 Ryan Kennedy
 pv-magazine-usa.com
 
 The United States Bureau of Land  Management (BLM) has officially axed the Esmeralda 7 solar project, a  project that would have smashed records as the largest solar facility in  the United States.
 
 The 6.2 GW solar project, located in  Nevada, would have added enough electric generation capacity to power  nearly 2 million U.S. homes. For context, the largest solar project in  the U.S. is the Mammoth solar project in Indiana, a 1.3 GW currently  project being built in phases.
 
 The project’s NEPA environmental review had been stalled since Donald Trump took office. It is now officially  listed on BLM’s website as cancelled.
 
 
  Site of the Esmeralda solar project. Image: Bureau of Land Management   Despite campaigning on an “all the above”  energy policy, the Trump administration has cracked down harshly on  renewable energy development.
 
 This July, the Department of Interior  announced it will require “elevated review” for solar and wind projects  on public land by Trump-appointee Secretary Doug Burgum. Projects seeking leases, rights-of-way, construction and operation plans, grants, consultations and biological opinions are now  subject to approval by Burgum.
 
 Kabir Green, director of federal affairs  for nature at the Natural Resources Defense Council said the move  imposes unprecedented scrutiny and bureaucratic roadblocks that could  indefinity delay or delay clean energy projects on public lands.
 
 “It is not about oversight, but about  unfettered obstruction of wind and solar projects that create jobs, cut  pollution, lower costs and strengthen communities. This policy protects  select industry profits, not the public interest,” said Green.
 
 The Esmeralda 7 project is comprised of  seven projects developed by NextEra Energy Resources, Leeward Renewable  Energy, Arevia Power and Invenergy. The projects would cover about 185  square miles of land, a land area close to the size of Las Vegas.
 
 BLM’s cancellation of Esmeralda 7 moves in  lockstep with President Trump’s message on Truth social late August:  “We will not approve wind or farmer destroying Solar.”
 
 
  
 Trump’s administration has taken a series of anti-renewables actions during his second term, on top of Congress’  clean energy-gutting One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Federal actions include:
 
 
 Despite the many roadblocks, renewable  energy is dominating new-build electric generation project queues. The  Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported the U.S. is projected  to have a record year for electric capacity buildout in 2025, adding 64  GW. The previous record was set in 2002, when developers added 58 GW of  capacity, 57 GW of which was natural gas.An executive order requiring that Treasury apply  stricter qualifications for solar and wind projects seeking federal tax credits. The Environmental Protection Agency is  clawing back $7 billion in Solar For All grant  funding. The grants are intended to support community solar projects  with guaranteed bill savings for low-income Americans. Solar and wind projects seeking to develop on federally owned land now  face “final review” from Trump-appointed Department of Interior head Doug Burgum. Trump executive order directed the Department of the Interior to  scrub for “preferential treatment” for wind and solar and eliminate such treatment. U.S. Department of Agriculture will  “no longer” fund solar projects, like those made available to farms and small businesses via the $4 billion Rural Energy for America (REAP) grant program. President Trump implemented  widespread tariffs to most goods, as well as energy component-specific tariffs and tariffs on critical materials like steel and aluminum.
 
 But this time, the record year for installations will be led by an emissions-free source instead. Solar is  expected to account for 33.3 GW of the 64 GW added this year. This is followed by 18.3 GW of battery energy storage, 7.8 GW of wind and 4.7 GW of natural gas, said EIA.
 
 Analysis from Lazard finds that  solar and wind energy projects have a lower levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) than nearly all fossil fuel projects – even without subsidy.
 
 pv magazine USA has contacted the Esmeralda project developers  and will follow up with more information on the cancellation listing on  BLM’s site.
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