White House Orders Agencies to Escalate Fight Against Offshore Wind The   effort involves several agencies that typically have little to do with   wind power, including the Health and Human Services Department.
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   A   damaged turbine at Vineyard Wind, the country’s second large-scale   offshore wind farm off the coast of Massachusetts, prompted the closure   of several beaches to swimmers when it broke last year.Credit...Randi Baird for The New York Times
         By  Maxine Joselow Lisa Friedman and  Brad Plumer
  Reporting from Washington
  Sept. 3, 2025Updated 2:56 p.m. ET
  The   White House has taken the extraordinary step of instructing a   half-dozen agencies to draft plans to thwart the country’s offshore wind   industry as it intensifies its governmentwide attack on a source of   renewable energy that President Trump has criticized as ugly, expensive   and inefficient.
  Susie Wiles, the   White House chief of staff, and Stephen Miller, a senior White House   adviser, are leading the effort, according to two people briefed on the   matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not   authorized to comment publicly.
  Agencies   that typically have little to do with offshore wind power have been   drawn into the effort, the two people said. At the Health and Human   Services Department, for instance, officials are studying whether wind   turbines are emitting electromagnetic fields that could harm human   health. And the Defense Department is probing whether the projects could   pose risks to national security.
  Last   week Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary,   said he was working with Doug Burgum, the interior secretary, Howard   Lutnick, the commerce secretary, Chris Wright, the energy secretary, and   Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary, as part of a “departmental   coalition team” to investigate the risks.. nytimes.com
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