- Climate Litigation Database
- /
- Search
- /
- United States
- /
- District of Columbia
- /
- Green Oceans v. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Green Oceans v. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Geography
Year
2026
Document Type
Litigation
Part of
About this case
Filing year
2026
Status
Complaint filed.
Geography
Docket number
1:26-cv-01006
Court/admin entity
United States → United States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.D.C.)United States → United States Federal Courts
Case category
Federal Statutory Claims (US) → NEPA (US)Federal Statutory Claims (US) → Other Statutes and Regulations (US)
Principal law
United States → Administrative Procedure Act (APA)United States → National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)United States → National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA)United States → Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA)
At issue
Challenge to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s approvals of the Sunrise Wind offshore wind project.
Topics
, ,
Documents
Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics
Beta
03/24/2026
Complaint filed.
A lawsuit filed in the federal district court for the District of Columbia challenged the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s (BOEM’s) approvals of the Sunrise Wind offshore wind project. The project is to be located on the Outer Continental Shelf to the south of Massachusetts. Plaintiffs included a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation that describes its core purpose as “protecting ocean biodiversity and health”; commercial and recreational fishermen; a nonprofit “alliance of the wild harvesters of the waters off of New England”; owners of historic oceanfront properties; and federally recognized Tribes. The plaintiffs asserted claims under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), the National Historic Preservation Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Under OCSLA, the plaintiffs claimed that BOEM approved the project in 2024 based on an erroneous interpretation of OCSLA Section 8(p)(4) that was withdrawn in 2025. The plaintiffs claimed that Section 8(p)(4) imposes mandatory duties on BOEM to ensure that each of its criteria are satisfied without detriment to other criteria rather than allowing BOEM “rationally balance” the Section 8(p)(4) criteria as was done in the 2024 approvals. The complaint alleged that the “rationally balance” interpretation allowed BOEM to approve a project that failed to address national security, environmental, and other issues “because each of those failures could be weighed against the project’s energy benefits and found acceptable.” The plaintiffs asserted that reevaluation based on the 2025 interpretation was required. Under NEPA, the plaintiffs’ arguments included that BOEM failed to justify “foundational” assumptions, including assumptions that the Sunrise Wind project would meaningfully address climate change (an assumption that the complaint alleged was contradicted by the final environmental impact statement) and the assumption in the No Action Alternative that electricity the project would have generated would instead be generated by fossil fuels. The plaintiffs contended that New York and Massachusetts climate change laws impose greenhouse gas emissions reduction obligations and that nothing in the record established that New York would rely on fossil fuels rather than on nuclear power or renewable energy sources other than Sunrise Wind. The plaintiffs requested that the court either vacate the 2024 approval or remand for consideration of the project under the OCSLA interpretation adopted in 2025.
Complaint
Summary
Challenge to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s approvals of the Sunrise Wind offshore wind project.
Topics mentioned most in this case Beta
See how often topics get mentioned in this case and view specific passages of text highlighted in each document. Accuracy is not 100%. Learn more
Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance