Revolution Wind would provide over 700 megawatts of electricity—equivalent to 2.5 percent of all power generated in New England. It was expected to reduce reliance on natural gas during winter months, when demand increases to keep homes warm and offshore winds are most gusty. Climate justice groups have been quick to denounce Trump’s move as an attack not just on the planet but also on workers.
Vaz reflected that in the past, he’s been in meetings where local environmental organizations expressed opposition to projects his union supported, but this one was different. “Having these people in favor of the project, having them with us—I felt confident this was good for America.”
It’s common for large projects, like Revolution Wind, to use union labor to ensure a steady pool of workers who have the skills for the job. In 2022, NABTU signed a project labor agreement with Ørsted, the Danish company building Revolution Wind.
The National Offshore Wind Agreement provides for apprenticeships and other training investments in addition to ensuring that these would be good-paying union jobs. It also included diversity targets, and “project-by-project Workforce Equity Committees to prioritize recruiting and retaining people of color, women, gender nonconforming people and local environmental justice communities,” as described in a statement by Ørsted.
TRUMP’S WAR ON WIND
Rather than agree to talks to restart the offshore wind-related projects, the Trump administration threatened to halt additional ones. In September, the administration used court filings to suggest it would reconsider federal approval of other previously approved projects, including the Maryland Offshore Wind Project, SouthCoast Wind, and New England Wind 1 and 2. That came on the heels of an announcement by the Department of Transportation that it was pulling $679 million in funding for upgrades to ports in support of offshore wind-related projects.
For workers in the building trades, the attacks on the wind industry spell a lot more uncertainty. As the Painters union said in a statement, “If this administration is willing to stop a nearly-finished, fully-approved infrastructure project with no warning, every project in every sector is now at risk.”
“In the first six months of this Administration, they have killed tens of thousands of jobs, and for the first time in 13 years, building trades members are collecting unemployment checks instead of building the energy dominance President Trump promised,” said NABTU's McGarvey.
Trump is a noted opponent of wind turbines. He has long complained about the sight of them off a golf course he owns in Scotland. Even as wildfires, heat waves, and deadly floods worsen, his administration is attempting to end the government’s ability to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
“I still have hope that the federal administration will change their mind,” said Vaz. “Wind power is working abroad and it will work here too. It would be awesome to get that call, and they say, ‘Hey, you’re gonna get to finish what you started.’”