| Ørsted to axe 2,000 jobs after US wind setbacks caused by Trump 
 
   
 Michelle Lewis | Oct 9 2025 - 1:29 pm PT
 
 17 Comments
 
 
  Photo: Ørsted 
 Danish  wind giant Ørsted announced today that it would cut around  2,000 jobs,  or around 25% of its workforce, over the next two years. It  will lay  off around 500 employees in Q4 2025, including 235 in Denmark.
 
 Ørsted says it has “sharpened its geographical and technological   focus” and will “primarily be directing it towards offshore wind in   Europe and select markets in the Asia-Pacific region in the future,” and   that it needs to “improve its competitiveness.?” The world’s largest   offshore wind developer says its annual savings as a result are expected   to amount to DKK 2 billion ($311 million) from 2028.
 
 “This  is a necessary consequence of our decision to focus our  business and  that we’ll be finalizing our large construction portfolio  in the coming  years – which is why we’ll need fewer employees. At the  same time, we  want to create a more efficient and flexible organization  and a more  competitive Ørsted, ready to bid on new value-accretive  offshore wind  projects,” said Rasmus Errboe, CEO of Ørsted.
 
 The US is  excluded from its plan because of Donald Trump’s hostility  toward  renewables, particularly wind power, which has caused a lot of  market  uncertainty on top of high interest rates and supply chain  challenges.  On August 22, the director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy  Management  sent   a vague letter  to  Ørsted commanding it to halt all activities on the fully permitted   Revolution Wind, citing “national security interests,” yet providing no   details.
 
 In September, a federal judge   cleared the way   for Ørsted’s nearly complete 704-megawatt (MW) Revolution Wind  offshore  wind farm to restart construction, overturning a stop-work  order  imposed by the Trump administration. Revolution Wind was already  about  80% complete, with all turbine foundations and 45 of 65 turbines   successfully installed, and is expected to power 350,000 homes in Rhode   Island and Connecticut. Ørsted lost over $2 million a day during the   stop-work order.
 
 According to   Reuters,   “When asked if the job cuts were due to the problems in the US, Errboe   told journalists the decision was not related to specific US  projects.”
 
 Earlier this week, Ørsted raised $9.42 billion through a heavily discounted   rights issue to shore up its balance sheet following the costly Revolution Wind setback
 
 electrek.co
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