Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 29
Trump Administration Orders Review of California Coastal Commission as State Fights 25-GW Wind Setback
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 29

Trump Administration Orders Review of California Coastal Commission as State Fights 25-GW Wind Setback

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 29

Summary

  • NOAA is set to evaluate the California Coastal Commission under federal law, marking a new step in the Trump administration’s clash with California over coastal energy and development decisions.
  • A May letter from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick pushed for the review, accusing the commission of obstructing spaceport projects; the department did not specify which proposals he meant.
  • The dispute follows the commission’s August rejection of a U.S. Space Force request to increase SpaceX launches from California’s central coast, a fight that led to a Musk lawsuit settled in April.
  • Energy tensions extend beyond rockets: the administration has used emergency powers to revive a California oil operation tied to a 2015 spill of more than 140,000 gallons, while state Attorney General Rob Bonta seeks to block it.
  • California is also battling Washington over offshore wind after a nearly $427 million grant was withdrawn, threatening a 25-gigawatt-by-2045 plan meant to power 25 million homes.

Insights

With a reopened pipeline not lowering gas prices, what is the true cost of the federal-state energy battle in California?
As federal policy boosts fossil fuels, can California’s ambitious offshore wind goals realistically be achieved by 2045?