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  "description": "Clean energy advocates were deeply disappointed by the bill",
  "path": "/senate-gop-removes-tax-on-solar-and-wind-energy-but-dismantles-climate-law-passed-by-democrats/",
  "publishedAt": "2025-07-01T20:33:43.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "sprawling Republican budget bill",
    "the 2022 climate law",
    "would end incentives for clean energy sooner"
  ],
  "textContent": "WASHINGTON, July 1, 2025 (AP) – The sprawling Republican budget bill approved by the Senate Tuesday removes a proposed tax on solar and wind energy projects but quickly phases out tax credits for wind, solar and other renewable energy.\n\nThe Senate approved the bill 51-50 as President **Donald Trump** and GOP lawmakers move to dismantle the 2022 climate law passed by Democrats under former President **Joe Biden**. Vice President **JD Vance** broke a tie after three Republican senators voted no.\n\nThe bill now moves to the House for final legislative approval.\n\nThe excise tax on solar and wind generation projects was added to the Senate bill over the weekend, prompting bipartisan pushback from lawmakers as well as clean energy developers and advocates.\n\nThe final bill removes the tax but mostly sticks with legislative language released late Friday night and would end incentives for clean energy sooner than a draft version unveiled two weeks ago.\n\n## Want top news about tech, politics, and infrastructure?\n\nFree Broadband Breakfast News every morning, Mon.-Fri.\n\nSubscribe\n\nEmail sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup.\n\nUnsubscribe anytime.\n\n### _Some warn of spike in utility bills_\n\nDemocrats and environmental groups said the GOP plan would crush growth in the wind and solar industry and lead to a spike in Americans’ utility bills. The measure jeopardizes hundreds of renewable energy projects slated to boost the nation’s electric grid, they said.\n\n“Despite limited improvements, this legislation undermines the very foundation of America’s manufacturing comeback and global energy leadership,” said **Abigail Ross Hopper** , president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association. If the bill becomes law, “families will face higher electric bills, factories will shut down, Americans will lose their jobs, and our electric grid will grow weaker,'' she said.\n\nThe American Petroleum Institute, the top lobbying group for the oil and gas industry, applauded the bill's passage.\n\n“This historic legislation will help usher in a new era of energy dominance by unlocking opportunities for investment, opening lease sales and expanding access to oil and natural gas development,'' said **Mike Sommers** , the group's president and CEO.\n\nWhile Democrats complained that the bill would make it harder to get renewable energy to the electric grid, Republicans said the measure represents historic savings for taxpayers and supports production of traditional energy sources such as oil, natural gas and coal, as well as nuclear power, increasing reliability.\n\nIn a compromise approved overnight, the bill allows wind and solar projects that begin construction within a year of the law's enactment to get a full tax credit without a deadline for when the projects are “placed in service,'' or plugged into the grid. Wind and solar projects that begin later must be placed in service by the end of 2027 to get a credit.\n\nThe bill retains incentives for technologies such as advanced nuclear, geothermal and hydropower through 2032.\n\nChanges to the renewable energy language — including removal of the excise tax on wind and solar — were negotiated by a group of Republican senators, including Alaska Sen. **Lisa Murkowski** and Iowa Sens. **Joni Ernst** and **Chuck Grassley**. Iowa is a top producer of wind power, while Murkowski is a longtime supporter of renewable energy as crucial for achieving energy independence, particularly for isolated rural communities in Alaska.\n\nMurkowski, who voted in favor of the final bill, called her decision-making process “agonizing.”\n\n“I had to look on balance, because the people in my state are the ones that I put first,” she told reporters after Tuesday's vote. “We do not have a perfect bill by any stretch of the imagination.”\n\n###  _GOP bill said to be ‘massively destructive’_\n\nRhode Island Sen. **Sheldon Whitehouse** , the top Democrat on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, called the bill a “massively destructive piece of legislation” that “increases costs for everyone by walloping the health care system, making families go hungry and sending utility bills through the roof.”\n\nThe bill “saddles our children and grandchildren with trillions and trillions of dollars in debt — all to serve giant corporations, fossil fuel polluters and billionaire Republican megadonors who are already among the richest people on the planet,” Whitehouse said.\n\nWyoming Sen. **John Barrasso** , a Republican and former chairman of the Senate Energy panel, hailed the bill for rescinding many elements of what he called the Biden administration’s “green new scam,” including electric vehicle tax credits that have allowed car owners to lower the purchase price of EVs by $7,500. The bill also blocks a first-ever fee on excess methane emissions from oil and gas production that industry groups fiercely opposed, increases oil and gas leases on public lands and revives coal leasing in Wyoming and other states.\n\n“Today, the Senate moved President Trump’s agenda forward,'' said West Virginia Sen. **Shelley Moore Capito** , a Republican who chairs the Senate environment committee.\n\nClean energy advocates were deeply disappointed by the bill, which they argue undoes much of the 2022 climate law approved by Democrats.\n\n“By eliminating a number of clean energy incentives and slashing others, this bill represents a significant step backward for America’s energy future,” said **Nathaniel Keohane** , president of the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, a nonprofit that seeks to accelerate the global transition to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions.\n\n“Curtailing incentives for electricity generated from wind and solar power is particularly shortsighted'' and will raise energy prices for households and businesses and threaten reliability of the electric grid, Keohane said.\n\n_This article was written by Matthew Daly of the Associated Press._",
  "title": "Senate GOP Removes Tax on Solar and Wind Energy but Dismantles Climate Law Passed by Democrats",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-11T03:26:58.208Z"
}