The move comes after the US government suspended leases on all large US offshore wind projects in December.
Why it matters: Prioritize residential and C&I projects to insulate your business from the political volatility currently plaguing large-scale renewable infrastructure.
Geopolitical Volatility and Renewable Infrastructure
The legal standoff between Ørsted and the US administration serves as a stark reminder of how quickly policy shifts can derail multi-billion euro infrastructure projects. While this specific case involves US offshore wind, the ripple effects for European solar installers are significant. When global leaders like Ørsted face capital uncertainty, it creates a market sentiment shift that impacts the entire renewable value chain, including supply chain pricing and investor appetite for European distributed energy projects.
Why This Matters for European Installers
Strategic Outlook
For the average European solar business, the lesson here is clear: diversification is your best hedge against political risk. Don't rely solely on government subsidy-heavy segments. Instead, focus on the 'prosumer' market—residential and C&I solar paired with storage—where the value proposition is rooted in energy independence and cost-savings rather than feed-in tariffs or lease-based utility projects. Watch for tightening in the utility-scale financing sector; if capital gets spooked, the resulting liquidity crunch will push more equipment into the residential distribution channel, potentially creating a temporary buyer's market for hardware.