The Great Lakes are ideal for wind energy. So where is it?
The Great Lakes are ideal for wind energy. So where is it?
There are no wind turbines on the Great Lakes 鈥 and it isn鈥檛 for lack of wind.
This titanic network of interconnected freshwater lakes with a surface area larger than New England, New York, and New Jersey combined is theoretically ideal for wind farms. Winds sweeping across the lakes are stronger, more consistent, and less turbulent than those over land. The that the Great Lakes states have enough offshore wind potential to generate more than three times their combined annual electricity consumption.
Plus, unlike proposed wind farms along the East Coast, where the federal government controls the seabed, Great Lakes states have jurisdiction over their lakebeds, reports. While projects would still face federal oversight, development in the Great Lakes as a potential workaround to President Trump鈥檚 attacks on the industry.
鈥淚f it鈥檚 done correctly and we鈥檙e able to harness even a fraction of that, we could offset a lot of electricity demand,鈥 said Melissa Scanlan, director of the Center for Water Policy at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Still, the vast inland lakes remain untapped largely due to a lack of streamlined permitting processes at the state level and economic hurdles. Offshore wind is expensive, and unlike the East Coast, where a mature wind industry has built specialized ships and ports to build turbines in the sea, the Ultimately, renewable energy experts say the region doesn鈥檛 have the legal framework or technical capacity to support such massive projects.
So far, offshore wind power 鈥 which involves installing turbines in large bodies of water, typically the ocean 鈥 in the United States, has been concentrated along the Eastern seaboard. Projects are still very rare: Just three are currently operating, with several more under construction, all along the East Coast.
More than a decade ago, President Barack Obama鈥檚 push for renewable energy buoyed a short-lived boom in offshore wind projects 鈥 particularly in the Great Lakes. The New York Power Authority and cities such as Toronto explored boosting their energy supply with wind power from Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. However, the initial boost only propelled one project forward: Ohio鈥檚 Icebreaker Wind in Lake Erie. After clashing with Ohio regulators over whether turbines could run through the night and battling a court case filed by local residents over impacts to bats and migratory birds, the developers eventually ran out of money and called the project off in 2023.
Building renewable energy offshore in federal waters has now become harder than ever. On his first day back in office, President Donald Trump signed a memorandum shutting down all offshore wind permitting, effectively suspending five large-scale East Coast projects. Although courts later , the uncertainty around offshore wind development under the Trump administration has persisted. And since any project on the Great Lakes would still need federal permits and reviews under the Clean Air Act and the Endangered Species Act, among others, wind developers have largely backed off their plans.
鈥淭hat told us that this was not the time to reintroduce floating offshore wind in Illinois,鈥 said Jim Lanard, co-founder of Magellan Wind, an offshore wind developer focused on the Great Lakes. 鈥淩ather, we needed to face the existential threat to the industry.鈥
Lanard said the regulatory uncertainty means it鈥檚 a bad time for business. His company, which in the past has submitted comments to the Illinois power regulators related to the deployment of offshore wind on Lake Michigan, has temporarily paused pursuing work on the Great Lakes.
鈥淕overnors and legislatures are so focused on trying to figure out how to run their governments with the reduced support coming from Washington D.C.,鈥 Lanard said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not time for them to add additional burdens onto their staff, who don鈥檛 know how they鈥檙e going to balance their budgets.鈥
Though Illinois鈥 jurisdiction over part of Lake Michigan presents some opportunities to work around Trump, Lanard said developers are not going to come to Illinois until there is a federal policy to protect the industry from whiplash elections. Moreover, Illinois and the other Great Lakes states have yet to establish a substantial legal framework to make local offshore wind farms a reality. Given these challenges, he estimated it will be some time before there are any wind farms on the Great Lakes.
鈥淚鈥檓 looking at five to seven years from 2029,鈥 Lanard said.
For years, state Representative Marcus Evans Jr. has championed a plan to make Illinois鈥 shores home to the first offshore wind farm in the Great Lakes. The legislation, known as , was designed to direct state planners to solicit proposals for a new utility-scale offshore wind farm and begin purchasing offshore wind power. , the measure has long failed to pick up enough momentum to break out of the statehouse. In 2025, Illinois Senator Robert Peters , but it didn鈥檛 receive a committee assignment. Evans said he decided against refiling the bill this year.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have the support,鈥 said Evans, a South Side Chicago Democrat. 鈥淚 used my energy this year to focus on some other items, but it鈥檚 still something that I think is important,鈥 he added.
Since the bill would require a localized industry to build, transport, and upkeep the turbines, Evans saw the push as a huge boon for the region鈥檚 clean energy workforce 鈥 one that the state of Illinois has long been trying to prop up.
Illinois passed the in 2021, which committed the state to investing $80 million annually to build out workforce training hubs focused on clean energy-related jobs. The same bill also put the state on track to transition its energy sector to 100 percent clean energy by 2050. Evans had hoped his initiative could help achieve both goals at once.
He is still optimistic that Lake Michigan will be next.
鈥淚 will file [a bill] in the future,鈥 he said.
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