Republicans Launch Plan to Scrap Biden Era Green Energy Tax Credits
Republicans on the Ways and Means Committee in the U.S. Congress released their new tax plan aimed at becoming part of the Trump administration’s proposed “One, Big, Beautiful Bill” tax and spending bill, which includes major cuts to Biden era green energy-focused tax incentives in areas including electric vehicles and clean energy production.
The Biden administration had put in place legislation directing hundreds of billions of dollars to accelerate the energy transition in the U.S. and to help meet climate goals put in place by the administration. Most notably, the Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law by President Biden in 2022, allocated nearly $270 billion through a series of tax credits, loans, grants and subsidies to areas including renewable energy and industrial decarbonization solutions.
President Trump has pledged to reverse Biden’s energy transition policy’s, including announcing the U.S.’ exit from the Paris Agreement on his first day in office, and also referencing plans to “end the Green New Deal,” likely a reference to the Inflation Reduction Act.
Key energy transition focused proposals presented in the Republican tax plan include terminating a $7,500 clean vehicle tax credit at the end of 2025 except for vehicles produced by manufacturers that have not sold 200,000 new clean vehicles, and a $4,000 tax credit for previously-owned clean vehicles, as well as a tax credit for up to $40,000 for large commercial clean vehicles.
The proposal would also eliminate tax credits at the end of 2025 for household energy efficiency improvements and for residential expenditures on renewable energy including solar electric property, solar water heating property, fuel cell property, small wind energy property, geothermal heat pump property, and battery storage property.
Additionally, the package would phase out tax credits for the production of or investment in zero emissions electricity, beginning with a 20% reduction in 2029, and full elimination in 2031, and would also end a tax credit for the production or use of clean hydrogen.
Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith said:
“Under the economic policies of President Biden and Washington Democrats, the wealthy and well-connected benefitted from taxpayer handouts. The Ways and Means Republican tax bill ends special interest giveaways and will hold the woke elite and entities that benefit from the tax code accountable.”
Sustainability-focused groups criticized the new proposals, warning that the elimination of the tax incentives will increase energy costs for consumers and slow the development of new energy sources.
In a statement following the release of the tax plan, Rich Powell, CEO of the Clean Energy Buyers Association said:
“Preserving the federal technology-neutral energy tax credits is crucial for supplying the energy needed to serve the 21st century industries of the United States and to drive American innovation and energy dominance. As electricity demand rapidly increases now and in the years ahead, we need more options, not less. Moreover, some of America’s largest companies are attempting to advance critical new technologies like geothermal and advanced nuclear energy, but those technologies will not move forward if these tax credits are phased out.