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Stalled US permits threaten $121 billion in wind and solar investment-report

By Thomson Reuters Jun 29, 2026 | 6:05 AM

June 29 (Reuters) – Trump administration policies that have stalled permits for renewable energy projects are putting more than $121 billion of investment at risk and slowing development of wind, solar and ​storage capacity needed to meet rising power demand, according ‌to a report published on Monday.

The findings by energy research firm Wood Mackenzie highlighted tension between President Donald Trump’s goal of fast-tracking energy infrastructure to support the artificial intelligence boom and his opposition to renewable energy.

The report said it looked ‌at ​early-stage projects valued at $121 billion that face ⁠investment risks due to delays.

A ⁠total of 92 gigawatts of clean energy projects, about enough to power 69 million homes, face heightened federal scrutiny following changes last year including a Department of the Interior directive that renewable ​energy permits at every stage required the approval of senior officials.

Those measures have lengthened timelines for projects involving federal agencies, including many ⁠on private land that still require ⁠permits for wetlands, wildlife or access roads.

Permitting in wetland ​areas, overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, is the primary ​constraint on private lands, Wood Mackenzie said. Wind projects are ‌also being held up by sluggish airspace reviews by the Department of Defense.

Overall, about 32% of the U.S. early-stage renewable pipeline is now subject to additional federal scrutiny, the report said.

Congressional Republicans and Democrats ⁠have sought to pass legislation to speed permitting for large projects.

A bill passed by the House of Representatives last year would meaningfully accelerate timelines, Wood ⁠Mackenzie said.

“Permitting remains ‌one of the most critical barriers to advancing ⁠new projects, and without more coordinated and predictable processes, ​delays ‌and uncertainty will continue to weigh on development ​timelines and investment ⁠decisions,” Gaby Ackermann Logan, a research associate at Wood Mackenzie, said in a statement.

The policy shift, alongside federal funding withdrawals, is already hitting projects on the ground.

Around 7 GW of capacity on federal land was cancelled or stalled in 2025, Wood Mackenzie said.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing ​by Cynthia Osterman)