U.S. interior department refunds $1 billion to TotalEnergies over wind leases

The U.S. Department of the Interior announced on Monday that it will refund nearly $1 billion to TotalEnergies for two unused offshore wind leases in the Atlantic Ocean. In exchange, the French company pledged to invest the funds in existing oil and gas projects in the Gulf of Mexico and Texas. Critics called the deal opaque and unnecessary.

On Monday, President Trump's Department of the Interior revealed plans to return almost $1 billion to TotalEnergies, a French oil multinational. The company had paid that sum during the Biden administration for leases to develop offshore wind farms off the New York-New Jersey Bight in the Atlantic Ocean. TotalEnergies was not actively building on these leases, and the Trump administration, which has halted new offshore wind auctions and opposed such projects, is compensating the firm to relinquish them. The refund equals the lease value and will support TotalEnergies' ongoing investments in Gulf of Mexico oil platforms and a Texas liquefied natural gas facility, decisions the company had already finalized. TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné stated, “we believe this is a more efficient use of capital.” Elizabeth Klein, former head of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management under Biden, criticized the arrangement as “a backdoor deal done with zero transparency, no public process, and no consideration of the impacts to ratepayers in states that had been planning on that offshore wind to meet their energy needs.” Hannes Pfeifenberger of the Brattle Group suggested the move avoids potential lawsuits, as TotalEnergies paid a premium—around four times the typical rate—for the leases. He noted, “[Trump’s Interior Department] might have been responsible for damages if the offshore wind developers sued the government for selling them leases and then basically making permitting impossible.” Experts like Klein emphasized that the deal does not permanently derail offshore wind, as future administrations could re-lease the areas. Senate talks on permitting reform continue unaffected, with Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse saying progress is steady and the administration has not appealed court blocks on other wind projects.

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French minister announces €70M aid to transport, fishing, and farming sectors amid fuel crisis; collage of affected workers.
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Government allocates 70 million euros to sectors hit by fuel price surge

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The French government announced a 70 million euro support plan on Friday evening for road transporters, fishermen, and farmers hit by energy price hikes from the Middle East conflict. Valid for April and renewable monthly, it provides targeted sectoral aid without worsening the public deficit. Sector reactions are mixed.

The US Interior Department has allowed the deadline to appeal court injunctions against its stop-work orders on five major offshore wind projects to lapse. This decision clears the way for construction to resume on the nation's first large-scale wind farms along the eastern seaboard. The projects, when complete, will generate power for over 2 million homes.

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West Texas ranchers and rural counties that turned to wind and solar for economic stability now face an uncertain future following federal policy changes under President Trump. The rollback of Inflation Reduction Act incentives has halted billions in investments and jeopardized tax revenues projected at nearly $50 billion statewide. Local leaders and landowners express mixed views on the developments.

Oil companies including ConocoPhillips, Shell and Exxon Mobil spent more than $164 million on leases covering 1.3 million acres in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve near Nuiqsut, despite a court injunction aimed at protecting Teshekpuk Lake. The Trump administration voided a prior agreement safeguarding the area for wildlife and Iñupiat communities. Local leaders expressed concerns over health, culture and subsistence impacts.

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President Trump met with executives from major tech companies last month, where they signed a voluntary pledge to cover energy costs for their data centers. The agreement, dubbed the Ratepayer Protection Pledge, includes securing their own power supplies and funding necessary infrastructure. Critics have dismissed it as lacking enforcement mechanisms.

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