Trump administration breaks ground on long-stalled NYC natural gas pipeline over green opposition
The Trump administration gathered three cabinet-level officials at Brooklyn's Floyd Bennett Field on Tuesday to celebrate the groundbreaking of the Northeast Supply Enhancement natural gas pipeline, a project that sat dormant for years after New York state regulators blocked it on environmental grounds. The ceremony marks the most visible energy-infrastructure win yet for a White House that has made "energy dominance" a governing slogan, and it lands squarely in the backyard of the progressive lawmakers who tried hardest to stop it.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and Environmental Protection Secretary Lee Zeldin all attended the event, hosted by Williams Companies, the firm managing construction. The pipeline, once built, would carry natural gas from Pennsylvania through New Jersey to endpoints on Staten Island and the Rockaways, serving existing National Grid customers across Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island, the New York Post reported.
Federal officials said the project will deliver 400,000 dekatherms per day of natural gas, enough, they claimed, to meet the energy needs of 2.3 million homes. The pipeline will be installed at a minimum of four feet below the sea floor.
Years of permit fights and an Oval Office deal
The NESE pipeline had been stalled for years after state regulators at the New York Department of Environmental Conservation denied permits over water quality concerns. Green-energy activists and progressive politicians treated the denial as a landmark victory in their campaign against fossil-fuel infrastructure in the Northeast.
That changed after an Oval Office meeting between Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul and President Trump regarding congestion pricing. The state restarted the approval process for the natural gas project, and last November, Hochul approved the state permits, including a water quality certification from the DEC.
Hochul framed her decision carefully. She said at the time that her administration had adopted "an all-of-the-above approach that includes a continued commitment to renewables and nuclear power to ensure grid reliability and affordability." She also pushed back against Washington Republicans, saying New York faces "war against clean energy" from them.
"I am comfortable that in approving the permits, including a water quality certification, for the NESE application, the DEC did just that."
That was Hochul's public defense. But the timeline tells a different story about what moved the needle. The permits sat dead until the governor walked into the Oval Office. They came alive afterward. Voters can draw their own conclusions about the sequence.
The numbers behind the project
Burgum put a price tag on the benefits. He claimed the pipeline would spur $1.8 billion in economic development and lower electricity bills by $6 billion over a 15-year period. He also pointed to a widening gap between supply and demand: federal officials said natural gas demand surged 49 percent since 2013, while pipeline capacity grew by only 26 percent and storage capacity by a bare 2 percent.
Those numbers frame the core argument the administration is making to New Yorkers. Demand is running away from supply, and the infrastructure hasn't kept pace. The result, Wright said, is that "poor political choices obstructed the building of energy infrastructure, leading to higher energy costs for millions of Americans."
The progressive wing of the Democratic Party has spent years arguing that blocking pipelines is the responsible path toward a clean-energy transition. That argument has a cost, and it shows up on utility bills every winter. Families in Brooklyn and Queens who heat their homes with natural gas have lived with the consequences of Albany's permit games while progressives tighten their grip on the Democratic Party from safe districts.
Administration officials take a victory lap
Zeldin, the former Long Island congressman now running the EPA, called the groundbreaking "a massive milestone." He credited President Trump's leadership and the National Energy Dominance Council for securing the permits.
"I, like so many New Yorkers, am extremely grateful for President Trump's leadership, along with his National Energy Dominance Council, for getting the permits necessary to allow this project to advance. We celebrate this incredible accomplishment and will continue pursuing every way possible to make life more affordable for all Americans."
Zeldin also looked ahead. He said the next priority is getting the Constitution Pipeline approved, a separate project that the NY DEC has blocked from running through upstate New York. He argued the Constitution Pipeline would "allow many New England residents to tap into the same abundant resources, especially during brutally cold winter months."
His sharpest line was aimed directly at Albany. The pattern of progressive Democrats in New York blocking energy infrastructure while constituents pay more is a familiar one, and it has drawn increasing criticism even from within the party. Zeldin did not mince words.
"Albany Democrats need to stop blocking the jobs, resources, and lower energy costs that will come with this vital project."
Wright reinforced the message with his own statement, calling the NESE pipeline "a win-win" and natural gas "a reliable, low-cost, clean burning option for New Yorkers to heat and power their homes and businesses." He pledged that the administration would "continue fighting to build more energy infrastructure so that all Americans have access to affordable, reliable and secure American energy."
The broader fight over energy in blue states
Burgum tied the pipeline fight to a larger national-security argument. He claimed China had outpaced America's electricity production because past administrations put U.S. "energy and national security at risk by burying America's Balance Sheet under red tape." The NESE pipeline, in his framing, is one piece of a broader reversal.
"Under President Donald J. Trump, we're reversing course with projects like the NESE pipeline to unleash American Energy Dominance, lower costs for American consumers, and restore a strong, reliable grid."
The administration's argument is straightforward: American households need affordable energy, American workers need infrastructure jobs, and American national security requires energy independence. The progressive counter-argument, that fossil-fuel infrastructure locks in emissions and delays the transition to renewables, has been the dominant position in Albany and among House Democrats who have increasingly broken with mainstream positions on a range of policy questions.
But the political ground is shifting. Hochul's decision to approve the NESE permits last November, after years of her party blocking the project, suggests that even blue-state governors are feeling the pressure from voters who care more about their heating bills than about activist scorecards. The Oval Office meeting that preceded the reversal only underscores how much leverage the federal government holds when it is willing to use it.
Zeldin's push for the Constitution Pipeline signals that the administration sees the NESE groundbreaking not as an endpoint but as a template. If Albany's DEC can be moved on one pipeline, the White House clearly intends to press the same case on the next one. The question is whether New York's progressive establishment will keep fighting projects that their own governor has started approving, or whether the green coalition's grip on state energy policy is finally loosening.
The same progressive movement that faces scrutiny over its own spending priorities has long treated pipeline opposition as a core identity marker. Blocking fossil-fuel infrastructure was the litmus test. Now a Democratic governor has signed off on the very project they fought hardest to stop, and a Republican administration is pouring the concrete.
For the families in Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island who will eventually receive the gas flowing through this pipeline, the ideological debate matters far less than whether the heat works in January. Federal officials said the project will boost reliability during peak winter demand and extreme weather, precisely the conditions under which supply shortfalls hit hardest and hurt the most vulnerable residents first.
The broader Democratic coalition continues to face internal friction over how far left to push on energy, spending, and foreign policy. The NESE pipeline fight is one more data point in a pattern: progressive activists set the agenda, working families absorb the cost, and eventually the politics become untenable even for the politicians who rode the green wave into office.
What remains unresolved
Several questions remain open. The specific permits approved last November have not been publicly identified by docket number. The exact construction timeline and completion date for the pipeline have not been disclosed. And whether Albany will cooperate on the Constitution Pipeline, or dig in for another years-long permit fight, is anyone's guess.
What is clear is that the Trump administration has turned a long-stalled energy project into a showcase event, complete with three cabinet secretaries and a message aimed squarely at progressive obstruction. The pipeline is real. The groundbreaking happened. And the green activists who spent years blocking it now have to explain to New York ratepayers why they tried so hard to keep affordable energy out of reach.
When politicians make energy more expensive on purpose and call it progress, sooner or later the voters send someone with a shovel.






