{"id":106829,"date":"2024-07-29T08:00:29","date_gmt":"2024-07-29T12:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/\/?p=106829"},"modified":"2024-08-16T14:01:07","modified_gmt":"2024-08-16T18:01:07","slug":"the-future-of-clean-energy-2024-presidential-election","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/\/2024\/07\/the-future-of-clean-energy-2024-presidential-election\/","title":{"rendered":"The future of clean energy could be decided in the 2024 presidential election"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cHe signed into law landmark actions bringing jobs back to the U.S. and revitalizing communities, while cutting a billion tons of carbon pollution,\u201d said Lori Lodes, Climate Power\u2019s executive director, in a press statement.<\/p>\n Now with Biden out of the race and the next presidential election just months away, many are wondering if the administration’s incentives that are starting to ramp domestic solar manufacturing and development are at risk.<\/p>\n The answer is a bit complicated. A few potential scenarios could yield very different results \u2014 including whether Democrats maintain control of the White House and a majority in the Senate, Republicans take over both, one or neither.<\/p>\n Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris was obviously supportive of the IRA in her role as vice president, but some think she may push the lever even further for green energy as the head of her own administration.<\/p>\n “She was born and bred in California, where the clean energy revolution, in some ways, has started,” said Jillian Blanchard, director of the Climate Change and Environmental Justice Program for the legal advocacy organization Lawyers for Good Government<\/a> (L4GG). “I think she sees not only the need to protect our planet, but also the benefits in terms of workforce development [and] job opportunities. I think she’s also dedicated to the cause of environmental justice, which is a big piece of Biden’s platform that I think she will continue and hopefully expand upon.”<\/p>\n As a U.S. senator, Harris introduced the Climate Equity Act<\/a> and Clean School Bus Act<\/a>, and co-sponsored the Green New Deal to transition the country to 100% clean energy.<\/p>\n “Vice President Harris has been integral to the Biden administration\u2019s most important climate accomplishments and has a long track record as an impactful climate champion,” said Lena Moffitt, executive director of nonprofit climate group Evergreen Action in a press statement. “We are confident that she is ready to carry forward President Biden\u2019s historic legacy and set a new high bar for climate ambition in America.\u201d<\/p>\n “It would take a substantial or definitive [Republican] victory with margin to effectuate a meaningful change in the IRA,” said Matt Breidert, senior portfolio manager at renewable energy investment firm Ecofin. “In absence of a sweep of the House, the Senate and the presidency, it will be difficult to materially change the IRA.”<\/p>\n If a Republican sweep does happen, some elements of the IRA are likely to be safer from slashes than others. Breidert said domestic renewable energy manufacturing credits would be difficult for Republicans to axe.<\/p>\n Many of the new solar manufacturing announcements<\/a> to come out of the IRA are benefitting red states, with investments by NorSun in Oklahoma<\/a>, PV Hardware in Texas<\/a> and ReCreate in Tennessee<\/a>, as just a few examples.<\/p>\n “The Republican Party is very keen to do more and more reshoring,” Breidert said.<\/p>\n SEIA president and CEO Abigail Ross Hopper has been spending lots of time on Capitol Hill ensuring legislators understand the impact of these credits in their states and districts. She’s also been addressing their concerns about Chinese imports by pointing to the manufacturing progress made stateside thanks to the IRA.<\/p>\n “If we want to address the Chinese influence on the solar and storage industry, we have to provide support to domestic manufacturing, and that comes through this tax credit,” Hopper said.<\/p>\n On top of the hometown benefits and independence from China, domestic manufacturing credits were determined to be a relatively low-cost budget appropriation when scored by the Congressional Budget Office.<\/p>\n “If you look at the cost of the manufacturing tax credits, they’re actually very low, relative to the whole funding size of the IRA. So our view is that we don’t think the manufacturing tax credits, manufacturing solar or wind equipment, would be highly at risk,” Breidert said.<\/p>\n Numerous manufacturers across the solar supply chain \u2014 including those making modules<\/a>, inverters<\/a>, racking<\/a> and more \u2014 have cited the IRA as the reason they’re moving manufacturing operations to the United States. They very likely would not have been able to make the move without the tax credits.<\/p>\nThe Biden administration unleashed a flurry of renewable energy activity since taking office in 2021, with official commitments to build more clean energy paired with massive incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act. Biden has taken more climate actions than any president before him, according to an analysis by more than 20 climate groups<\/a>, including the youth-led Sunrise Movement.<\/p>\n
IRA outlook if Republicans win<\/strong><\/h3>\n
While the IRA would likely be preserved under a Harris presidency, Republican nominee Donald Trump called President Biden’s agenda a “Green New Scam” and said during the 2024 Republican National Convention that he would redirect climate-related funding, according to The Hill<\/em><\/a>. But it may not be that simple to execute, even if Trump does take the presidency.<\/p>\n