Eolian in the News
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The GOP tax bill guts subsidies for the fastest-growing sources of U.S. electricity, solar and wind. Meanwhile, China races ahead with a broad energy strategy.
July 3, 2025
By Evan Halper
Republicans in Congress produced a surprise winner this week when they axed hundreds of billions of dollars in federal clean-energy subsidies: China’s artificial intelligence industry.
China is pouring money into energy production to support its bid to dominate AI. America’s tech industry, meanwhile, has been scrounging for more energy to run power-hungry AI data centers and strongly urged Congress not to wipe out solar and wind tax credits.
Solar panels and windmills are the fastest-growing sources of power in the United States, accounting for 80 percent of new energy being added to the grid. Yet Republican lawmakers and Trump administration officials remain intent on stifling clean energy progress in America, calling it Biden-era folly.
Now the consequences of the massive cuts in the GOP tax and budget bill are coming into focus. Modeling of the package by energy economists shows they will substantially reduce the amount of electricity added to the U.S. power grid in the coming years, even as China races ahead.
READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON POST HERE: https://wapo.st/46NzYJi
Aaron Zubaty recently spoke at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington DC during Real Clear's Energy Future Forum, and explained that building battery storage at grid-critical locations in the U.S. can unlock 30-50 GW of untapped spare transmission capacity, making more effective use of the infrastructure we already have built and paid for, and boosting efficiency of power plant operations without waiting for new generation. The first step of exercising energy dominance should be better use of what we have already built, and not letting outdated regulatory models stand in the way any longer.
WATCH MORE ON YOUTUBE HERE: https://www.youtube.com/live/79muWat5G8w?t=24324s
The administration blocked an electricity plant in Michigan from closing, overturning a plan by a utility and local officials.
June 1, 2025
By Evan Halper and Jake Spring
An emergency order last month from Washington rattled Michigan regulators: The Trump administration reversed the state’s plan to retire an aging power plant, forcing it to remain open and continue burning coal.
Michigan and the plant’s operator have mounds of evidence that closing the 63-year-old J.H. Campbell plant on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan won’t create a shortage of electricity. But the Trump administration adopted a different view, claiming the Midwest is overly dependent on intermittent wind and solar power. Energy Secretary Chris Wright exercised rarely used federal authority to block the closure, which had been scheduled for May 31. His order requires the plant to continue operating for three more months — and possibly longer.
The move will collectively increase electric bills forratepayers in the Midwest bytens of millions of dollars, according to Michigan officials. More broadly, it wasseen as an opening salvo in President Donald Trump’s effort to reverse America’s transition to clean energy and restore the nation’s dependence on burning fossil fuels.The administration’s strategy includes using federal power to overturn the plans of local utilities and regulators.
Send all media inquiries to: media@eolianenergy.com