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Here’s the good news: Before Senate Republicans passed the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” this afternoon, they removed the surprise tax on solar and wind that was “designed to fully kill the industry,” as HEATED reported on Sunday. Here’s the bad news: Almost everything else. See, I have a theory that Republicans never intended to pass that tax—they just added it at the last minute so it wouldn’t look as extreme when they decided to wipe out lucrative tax incentives for renewable energy, thereby erasing thousands of jobs, raising electricity prices, and worsening the climate crisis. Which, by the way, is exactly what they did. The Senate-passed version of the megabill, which now goes back to the House for approval, ”significantly curtails clean energy tax credits” that were part of President Joe Biden’s 2022 landmark climate law. Project 2025, the blueprint for Trump’s second term published by the conservative Heritage Foundation, included many proposals for dismantling U.S. climate and environmental policy. But the most extreme and potentially impactful was its proposal to eliminate all government incentives and tax credits for solar, wind, and battery projects, while keeping the existing billions in subsidies for the fossil fuel industry. Despite Trump’s insistence that he knew nothing about Project 2025 and had “nothing to do” with it, we took its proposals seriously. And in October, before the election, we were the only media outlet to report on a detailed study looking at how that proposal would affect the U.S. transition to climate-friendly energy. Published by one of the world’s largest dedicated power market analytics companies, Aurora Energy Research, the study predicted that removing tax credits for renewable energy would hinder solar, wind, and battery deployment by 212 GW by 2040. 212 GW is, for context, a huge amount of renewable energy development to lose out on, enough to power 159 million homes—more than all the homes in the country. We reported:
But here’s the kicker: We were told, at the time, that this represented both an “extreme” and “unlikely” scenario.
There was only one reason Aurora’s researchers could think of that Trump would repeal clean energy tax credits: If he wanted to extend massive tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy.
This is, of course, exactly what is now happening. The entire purpose of all the spending cuts in so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” is to pay for an extension of tax breaks that overwhelmingly benefit the ultra-rich. And now, some analysts are predicting an even bigger consequences for the renewable energy sector should the bill pass. On Tuesday, Reuters reported that research firm Energy Innovation projected that the bill “would result in a fall of 300 GW of electricity capacity at a time of soaring demand due to data center and AI growth.” |