Axios Austin reports on the rollback of key federal incentives from H.R. 1, and the impacts they pose on Texas' advanced energy economy. Matthew Boms of the Texas Advanced Energy Business Alliance (TAEBA) discussed the benefits of advanced energy solutions in bolstering Texas' grid, highlighting that wind and solar supplied about one-third of all power for the Texas grid operator, ERCOT.
Texas' renewable energy industry is bracing for a hit in the new year as the Trump administration is ending key tax credits.
Why it matters: Wind and solar power are relatively speedy ways to add electricity to the grid as demand rises — and they helped stave off power shortages in Texas during the summer.
Driving the news: As part of the "big, beautiful bill," the Trump administration is phasing out a residential rooftop energy credit by January.
What they're saying: In a July executive order ending subsidies for renewable energy, President Trump said wind and solar power displaces other forms of electricity, "compromises our electric grid, and denigrates the beauty of our nation's natural landscape."
Zoom out: The Tax Foundation, a think tank that generally favors lower taxes, predicts ending electric power and other business-related tax credits in the one-big-beautiful-bill will raise nearly $260 billion nationally for the U.S. Treasury over the next decade.
The other side: "This summer, renewables carried the grid," Matt Boms, executive director of the Texas Advanced Energy Business Alliance, told reporters this fall in a briefing organized by the Texas Reliable Grid Project, a group that promotes clean energy.
Read the full article here.