California – California Sen. Alex Padilla is accusing President Donald Trump of turning a routine federal review process into a political roadblock for wind energy, warning that the result could be felt far beyond clean energy companies and directly inside American homes through higher power bills.
The Democratic senator from California made the charge in a post on X, linking the dispute over wind permitting to the broader fight over energy costs.

“BREAKING: Trump is blocking over 150 wind projects as electricity prices skyrocket,” Padilla wrote.
“This isn’t energy dominance, this is sacrificing American jobs, weakening the American grid, and forcing American families to pay even higher prices.”
BREAKING: Trump is blocking over 150 wind projects as electricity prices skyrocket.
This isn’t energy dominance, this is sacrificing American jobs, weakening the American grid, and forcing American families to pay even higher prices. https://t.co/Ps0yktGqWK
— Senator Alex Padilla (@SenAlexPadilla) May 8, 2026

His criticism followed a new report by Heatmap News journalist Jael Holzman, which said the Trump administration is effectively slowing or stopping new wind development through the federal approval system tied to aviation safety and military review.
The report said at least 165 wind projects are now stalled in the Federal Aviation Administration determination process, representing roughly 30 gigawatts of possible electricity generation.
At the center of the fight is a process that normally sounds technical and unremarkable.

Wind turbines, because they can rise more than 200 feet into the air, often need FAA “no hazard” determinations to show they will not create problems for aircraft. But the process also involves the Department of Defense, which reviews whether proposed projects could interfere with radar, military flights or other national security interests.

Industry groups now say that system has become a choke point.
The American Clean Power Association has said hundreds of wind projects across more than 30 states are stalled because Pentagon reviews have not been completed, with some projects reportedly delayed even where no obvious military conflict exists.
The Associated Press reported that the delays involve at least 30 gigawatts of proposed capacity and come as developers face tax credit deadlines and growing electricity demand.
The administration has defended the reviews as necessary for national security. The Pentagon has said it is evaluating projects to protect military operations, while the White House has pushed back against the idea that the policy amounts to a formal ban on wind power.
But critics argue that the practical effect is the same: projects cannot move forward without the necessary sign-offs, investors lose confidence, and developers are left waiting.
That uncertainty is exactly what Padilla and other renewable energy supporters say will hurt consumers.
They argue that blocking or slowing new power generation at a time of rising demand weakens the grid instead of strengthening it.
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In states like California, where leaders have pushed aggressive zero-emission goals, wind is not seen as a side issue. It is one piece of a larger plan to add cleaner electricity, modernize power systems and reduce long-term dependence on fossil fuels.
The dispute also fits into a longer political battle over Trump’s energy agenda.
On his first day back in office, Trump issued an order temporarily withdrawing areas of the Outer Continental Shelf from new offshore wind leasing and ordering a review of federal wind permitting practices.
The White House said the move was tied to concerns about costs, wildlife, reliability and legal issues involving previous approvals.
That policy quickly became the subject of legal challenges. In December 2025, a federal court struck down the administration’s broad pause on wind energy authorizations, finding that parts of the freeze violated federal administrative law.
Still, opponents say the administration has found other ways to slow the industry. One anonymous energy lawyer quoted by Heatmap described the approach sharply: “This is the strategy for how you kill an industry while losing every case: just keep coming at the industry.”
Padilla’s post drew quick reaction online, where supporters echoed his warning about electricity prices while critics questioned the reliability and cost of wind power. The exchange showed how deeply divided the country remains over what “energy dominance” should mean.
For Trump and his allies, the answer has often centered on expanding traditional energy and scrutinizing renewables.
“It’s expensive to build, limited capacity makes it ineffective, and frankly it’s an eyesore, much like you. You are a domestic terrorist,” one user who is obviously against wind turbines commented.
“Wind energy is not the cheapest energy. It’s natural gas. And it will be nuclear energy once we get it started again,” one X user commented under the post.
“And energy prices will get even higher at our expense, no problem the President is a billionaire and we’re paying his lights,” another user added.
“That’s what America voted for. Why so surprised?,” @Milnoc added.
For Padilla, the latest delays tell a very different story: jobs left waiting, projects frozen in paperwork, and families facing the possibility of higher bills while a major source of new electricity sits on hold.