It was supposed to be a lifeline for a blue-collar town. Then Trump returned.

By Benjamin Storrow | 05/29/2026 06:15 AM EDT

New Bedford, Massachusetts, is ground zero for America’s wind industry.

wind turbines sit in an empty staging lot

The dock that launched America’s offshore wind industry now sits mostly empty. Only remnants of the project — empty racks, cranes and broken blades — remain. Katie Ellsworth/POLITICO

NEW BEDFORD, Massachusetts — The dock that launched U.S. offshore wind is mostly empty now. The 200-foot-tall tower pieces that loomed like skyscrapers over a harbor of fishing trawlers are gone. So too are the house-sized gearboxes and turbine blades stretching the length of a soccer field.

The big turbine parts were supposed to represent a new era in a city where fish houses and abandoned factories line the waterfront. They were assembled here, sent out to sea and installed as part of Vineyard Wind, the largest renewable energy project built to-date east of the Mississippi River. All that was left on a recent April day were empty blade racks, a pair of red cranes and three broken blades.

It wasn’t supposed to look like this.

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Vineyard Wind was supposed to be the first of many. Instead, it may be the only offshore wind project ever built in New Bedford.

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