RWE Ditches U.S. Offshore Wind, and That Should Scare Everyone
Germany’s RWE just pulled the plug on its U.S. offshore wind business. Quietly.
No fireworks, no headlines about thousands of turbines scrapped—just a dry admission that it’s “halting activities” in American waters.
For one of Europe’s biggest green energy giants to walk away from a market as large as the U.S., in the middle of an energy transition no less, is not just a business decision.
It’s a red flag.
The exit—confirmed by a speech manuscript published ahead of a yet-to-be-delivered speech by the company’s CEO—comes as RWE rethinks where and how it deploys capital. In March, the company slashed $11 billion off its low-carbon investment plan, citing rising costs, hostile regulatory environments, and a spike in its required return on investment from 8% to 8.5%. In other words: too risky, too expensive, too slow.
RWE’s CEO, Markus Krebber, had already warned last fall that Trump’s return to power could delay or derail projects on the U.S. East Coast. Now, the company is making that pivot official. All U.S. offshore wind operations are paused—indefinitely—and RWE will instead chase safer, more lucrative projects in places like Germany, where it just broke ground on a new 22.8-MW onshore wind farm.
The move is attention-grabbing in that RWE is no lightweight. It’s not some upstart folding under pressure—it’s one of the most aggressive offshore wind developers in the world, with the technical, political, and financial muscle to push projects forward even against the current and in tough conditions.
If they are walking away from the U.S. market, what message does that send to the rest of the world?
It also comes as RWE undergoes boardroom changes. Supervisory board member Rolf Martin Schmitz has abruptly resigned as of a day ago, prompting speculation that strategic disagreements were brewing behind the scenes. A new board member will be elected at the May 3 AGM—likely someone more hawkish on capital discipline.
This isn’t just about wind. It’s about the risk calculus of doing business in America right now. Between permitting chaos, political volatility, and rising project costs, even climate-forward giants are hitting the brakes. And if offshore wind—a pillar of Biden’s net-zero dreams—is losing major players, the whole foundation starts to look a little shaky.