Gutting clean energy incentives would drive up electric bills

 Gutting clean energy incentives would drive up electric bills

Wind turbines and solar panels on March 6, 2024, near Palm Springs, California. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The Trump administration insists that renewables are making energy more expensive and that more fossil-fueled power will reduce utility bills. But those claims are false — and if congressional Republicans succeed in repealing key tax credits supporting the growth of clean energy, Americans will suffer the consequences in higher electric bills.

Key members of the Trump administration have disparaged clean energy as a wasteful distraction while praising fossil gas and coal. Last week at an industry event, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said wind and solar have ​“obvious scale and cost problems,” and dismissed their prospects for serving more than a fraction of the country’s power needs.

But Energy Innovation’s report repeats findings from a series of studies over the past months that forecast major downsides to repealing the tax credits, including lost jobs, hundreds of billions of dollars of foregone investment — and significantly more expensive electricity for U.S. businesses and households.

“We looked at a state-by-state level at energy bills as well as jobs and economic growth,” said Robbie Orvis, Energy Innovation’s senior director of modeling and analysis. ​“Across the board, repealing the IRA is going to make it more expensive for the average household — and in some states, dramatically.”

The report modeled electricity costs in two scenarios — one in which current incentives and federal funding are kept in place, and one in which they are repealed this year. Under the ​“repeal” scenario, annual consumer energy bills would be more than $6 billion higher for U.S. households in 2030 and more than $9 billion higher in 2035. Translated to individual households, energy costs would increase by an average of $48 per year in 2030 and $68 per year in 2035, and continue to rise in future years. 

Energy Innovation projects that energy costs for U.S. households will rise if key IRA clean energy tax credits are repealed and other federal climate funding disappears. (Energy Innovation)

Some states will see relatively low increases, Orvis said. ​“But when you look out over 2035, most households are over $100 per year in energy expenditures.” 

The findings are consistent with other recent studies on the same topic.

Last month, The Brattle Group published a report, commissioned by conservative environmental advocacy group ConservAmerica, that found repeal of the clean energy tax credits would increase residential electric bills nationwide by an average of $83 per year by 2035, and up to $152 per year in California, New England, and much of the upper Midwest.

And NERA Economic Consulting projected in a February report commissioned by the Clean Energy Buyers Association trade group that repealing the tax credits would drive average U.S. electricity prices up nearly 10% by 2029, and by more than 30% for commercial and industrial electricity customers in certain states.

Republican leaders have committed to slashing federal spending to pay for the cost of extending the multi-trillion-dollar tax cut passed during the first Trump administration, which primarily benefits corporations and wealthy individuals. Cutting clean energy incentives could be on the chopping block as a result, although they’d only cover a fraction of the tax breaks.

Energy Innovation graph shows repealing clean tax credits in the Inflation Reduction Act will increase U.S. electricity costs
Energy Innovation projects that energy costs for U.S. households will rise if key IRA clean energy tax credits are repealed and other federal climate funding disappears. (Energy Innovation)

But most of the investment in clean energy facilities and factories spurred by the law has been in states and congressional districts represented by Republicans, potentially making the path to repealing the Inflation Reduction Act’s clean energy incentives more difficult.

Last week, 21 GOP Congress members wrote a letter demanding to preserve those tax credits, saying they’re critical to growing the economy and achieving the Trump administration’s ​“energy dominance” agenda. They also warned that repealing them ​“would increase utility bills the very next day.”

.CANARY MEDIA

Ayeni Akinola

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