
Nick Pope
Contributor
Amanda Lefton, the former director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), went to work for a major offshore wind company after the agency boosted the industry and worked to limit offshore fossil fuel development on her watch.
Lefton spearheaded the Biden administration’s effort to build out 30 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity along America’s coasts by 2030 in her capacity as the leader of BOEM, playing a key role in the administration’s all-of-government offshore wind push from February 2021 to February 2023, according to her LinkedIn profile. She then went to work on green energy-related issues for Foley Hoag LLC — a major D.C. law firm — for approximately six months and then joined RWE, a major player in the offshore wind space, as the head of development for the east coast in July 2023.
This is hardly surprising given the incestuous relations between the Biden BOEM and the wind industry. On Ms. Lefton’s watch the agency helped rush the so-far disastrous Vineyard Wind project through. BOEM even waived the financial assurance requirements intended to protect the taxpayers from the costs of decommissioning the project when complete (while, in the Gulf, it was modifying those same requirements in an attempt to drive small oil and gas companies out of business),” Michael Chamberlain, director of Protect the Public’s Trust, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Former Deputy Secretary of the Interior Tommy Beaudreau, her boss during most of her tenure at BOEM, had previously represented Vineyard Wind. This revolving door has been spinning everywhere the Biden administration and the climate sector meet. The players remain the same, the only thing that changes is who signs the paychecks.” (RELATED: Revolving Door: It Took CNN Less Than 48 Hours To Hire Comey’s Assistant)
Dem Senator Who Decried ‘Revolving Door’ Poses With Lobbyists Who Donated To Her Campaignhttps://t.co/ZuJkFb601w
— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) May 10, 2024
RWE is headquartered in Germany, but it has offices in New York City and other American cities. The company became the largest offshore wind leaseholder in the New York Bight lease area in 2022, the same year it won a lease for floating offshore wind development off the coast of Northern California.
“RWE abides by all conflict-of-interest laws and regulations,” a RWE spokesperson told the DCNF when reached for comment on behalf of Lefton. The company did not address questions about Lefton’s compensation or whether her intimate knowledge of BOEM played any role in the firm’s decision to hire her.
Sam Eaton, the CEO of RWE Offshore Holdings, praised Lefton’s “know-how navigating all levels of government” that helped lead to approvals for two major offshore wind farms in her tenure at BOEM in a statement addressing her hiring.
As Chamberlain noted in his statement, Lefton ran BOEM when the agency greenlit the massive Vineyard Wind development off the coast of Nantucket in May 2021. Lefton said at the time that the Vineyard Wind approval “represents the power of a government-wide approach to offshore wind permitting, taking stakeholder ideas and concerns into consideration every step of the way.”
However, Vineyard Wind later became the subject of controversy when one of the development’s turbine blades malfunctioned, fractured and fell into the Atlantic. The resulting debris floated its way to nearby beaches, forcing their closure as workers cleared the pollution and enraging locals.
Moreover, BOEM finalized the most restrictive five-year schedule for oil and gas leasing in modern U.S history in December 2023. While Lefton was no longer running the agency at that point in time, BOEM published the schedule approximately 500 days late, meaning that the agency was dragging its feet on the oil and gas leasing schedule while Lefton was in charge of BOEM.
Lefton is also an on-the-record opponent of the continued long-term use of fossil fuels, telling E&E News in May 2022 that “we have to transition to clean renewable energy in order to fight climate change” and that she favors policies like incorporating climate costs into oil and gas leasing analyses and making use of the social cost of carbon metric. The outlet later reported on Jan. 24 that Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is considering nominating Lefton to run the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation.
All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.
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Lefton, thy name is corruption.
I agree with you.
Is that like when you turn the ocean’s temperature up or down or adjust the wave height?
The left is synonymous with corruption. As is the wind industry.
Corporate capture of federal officials and regulatory agencies. The theme sounds very familiar.
President Dwight D. Eisenhour described the corruption but the Leftists in and out of government used it as a template, not a cautionary tale. The only way to fix the problem is to cut the size and influence of government drastically.
That regulatory agencies eventually become captured by the industry they are supposed to be regulating is utterly inevitable. The best yuo can ever hope to do, is to slow down and on occasion partly reverse this capture.
Yet another example of “Jobs for the gals” The time honoured abuse of rules in politics and business are well tried and tested.
You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours.
The modern version of that time honoured practice is, arrogance and the brass neck ‘up yours’ attitude of modern politicians, makes them relaxed even happy to display the reality of corruption in plain sight.
Yeah, you ok our off-shore wind project and we will have a nice, high paying job for you with our windmill company in the future.
This Revolving Door should be outlawed. It just invites corruption.
I thought it was outlawed- but they’re are probably big loopholes.
The problem is that regulating agencies want to hire people who have knowledge about the industry to be regulated. The best place to find such people is in the industry being regulated.
Companies being regulated want to hire people who know how to navigate the regulatory morass. The best place to find such people, is in the regulating agencies.
Sure, but there should be some time between these moves- to minimize potential corruption.
Your first part mostly true but not so much here in Wokeachusetts which has a reputation for nepotism, cronyism, affirmative action and now wokeism. I could write a book on the subject.
““Jobs for the gals””
In Wokeachusetts- most top jobs in the state government are held by gals. And whenever possible, these gals hire more gals to work under them, no pun intended. 🙂
It would help the reader to understand the lunacy if phrases like ‘in order to fight climate change’ are followed by an editor note to the effect of ‘(if that were possible)’. Without such qualification the impression is given that also the reporter believes the ruse that mankind has control over ‘the climate’, which is stark raving nonsense.
Lunacy indeed. They never tell us what “the climate” will look like when we’ve fully defeated climate change. No more storms? No more droughts? no more heat waves? The whole concept doesn’t even rise to idiot level.
Another example of people in government laying the groundwork to enrich themselves while ranting about those not in government enriching themselves. I won’t hold my breath waiting for Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren to speak out against this practice. It might disrupt the kickbacks they expect to receive.
Amanda Lefton used Federal Funds to finance her career move !!!
Some recent news about the Vineyard 1 offshore wind farm.
Investigations by the Bureau of Energy Management (BOEM) and the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) found insufficient bonding at certain locations in the blade that failed and also in additional blades inspected.
Vineyard Wind have been directed to remove all blades manufactured at GE Vernova’s facility in Gaspe, Canada. This covers 22 locations and possibly another 2. The manufacturer will add a monitoring system to each turbine to notify of blade anomalies.
https://www.offshorewind.biz/2025/01/2/canada-made-ge-vernova-blades-to-be-removed-from-vineyard-wind-1-site/
(GE Vernova also had a blade failure at Dogger Bank A in the North Sea some months ago)
GE Vernova has been all over television lately, advertising what good guys they are.
Date wrong in link. Should be January 21.
Ms. Lefton’s post-government employment is yet another reason that the word “amakudari” needs to be used more frequently.
Amakudari—meaning descent from heaven—is an institutional practice where senior Japanese bureaucrats are plucked from the civil service and installed in cushy executive positions within the public or private sector.
Ref.
https://thediplomat.com/2011/05/the-problem-with-amakudari/
Favorite blogger Glenn Reynolds addresses this issue in his “revolving door tax” — https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013/01/28/revolving-door-government-ethics/1868597/