Batteries, geothermal, and hydropower get a surprising boost, but rebates for efficient appliances and rooftop solar appear dead.

Sunlight hits the U.S. Capitol building.
Credit: Architect of the Capitol

By Kathryn Krawczyk, Canary Media

The Senate Finance Committee released its portion of the ​“Big, Beautiful Bill” on Monday, including highly anticipated plans for clean energy tax credits that the House’s version sought to repeal. Here’s what’s better off in the Senate text — which still could change — and what’s not looking so hot.

Winners

Solar and wind — sort of

The House version would require clean power projects to start construction within 60 days of the bill’s passage to access production and investment tax credits introduced under the Inflation Reduction Act. The Senate proposes a more gradual phaseout of credits for solar and wind projects before they terminate entirely at the end of 2027.

Certain wind and solar projects would be able to access the tax credits beyond that point, as long as they are at least 1 gigawatt, are on federal land, and have already earned right-of-way approval from the Bureau of Land Management. But as Heatmap notes, those exceptions are unlikely to help any projects already in development.

Utility-scale battery storage

Incentives for energy storage projects would’ve ended just like those for wind and solar under the House bill, but that’s changed in this version. The Senate specifically says battery storage projects can access those production and investment tax credits until 2036, though the value of the incentives will taper over the years.

Read the full story here

Related: Decoding the mega-bill’s threat to clean energy (Politico)


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