
Gas Boom Grows, Solar Boom Slows Amid A Failing Energy Transition
A pair of stories in recent days illustrate the rapidly shifting equation for the prospects of a real energy transition in the United States during Donald Trump's second presidency. Thanks in large part to the administration's radical rebalancing of federal energy policies, the momentum is shifting heavily in favor of traditional energy sources like oil, natural gas, and nuclear power as tax breaks and subsidies for renewables are being systematically eliminated. The end result is an altered outlook on which form of generation will boom into the future.
A Gas Generation Boom Driven By AI
In the July 24 issue of the Wall Street Journal's Climate and Energy newsletter, Ed Ballard writes that 'There's Never Been a Better Time to Be Selling Natural-Gas Turbines.' On the same day, Reuters published a piece by Nichola Groom headlined, 'Boom fades for US clean energy as Trump guts subsidies.' Taken together, the stories detail a reversal of Biden-era fortunes for the respective industries which has come about more rapidly and comprehensively than anyone could have realistically imagined just six months ago.
This time last year, speculation ran rampant that a long backlog for sourcing natural gas turbines would limit the prospects for natural gas to provide a major share of new power generation needed to meet rapidly rising electricity demand. But, as the big tech companies in the AI industry, whose enormous data centers springing up across the country are the major driver of incremental demand, developed plans to secure their power needs, a consensus began to form that natural gas generation is the ideal solution for the coming decade for a variety of reasons.
Outside view of the newly completed Meta's Facebook data center in Eagle Mountain, Utah on July 18, ... More 2024. The data center is a complex of five large buildings each over four football fields long and totaling 2.4 million square feet. (Photo by GEORGE FREY / AFP) (Photo by GEORGE FREY/AFP via Getty Images)
Those reasons include:
As that consensus began forming last summer, Ballard writes, prices for the turbines 'went through the roof.' But, at the same time, the handful of big turbine manufacturers, including GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, developed and announced plans to expand existing facilities, build new ones, and increase their output of new turbines.
Ballard notes that all three companies are in the process of expanding their U.S. operations, adding that 'GE Vernova looks the most convinced,' pointing to plans to expand the output from its Greenville, SC plant from 55 turbines per year to as many as 80, a 40% increase. More expansion may ultimately be needed given the current backlog with lead times as long as four years, but GE Vernova CEO Scott Strazik says his company will need more certainty around the AI industry's ultimate true generation needs before committing his company to more capital outlays.
Solar Boom Slows Amid D.C. Policy Shift
While gas generation is in a renaissance, Groom says the U.S. solar boom of recent years has suddenly stalled. Indeed, the boom may already be fading amid decisions by an array of solar manufacturers to cancel planned new capital investments.
'Singapore-based solar panel manufacturer Bila Solar is suspending plans to double capacity at its new factory in Indianapolis,' writes Groom. She also points to decisions by both Canada-based Heliene and Norwegian solar wafer maker NorSun to re-evaluate or suspend planned new investments as federal policy shifts.
Groom also notes that even a pair of fully permitted solar facilities in Oklahoma now face cancellation in the wake of the enactment of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which gradually repeals Biden-era tax breaks and subsidies for both the wind and solar industries in the coming few years. The President levied another hit at solar's future with a July 7 executive order directing strict enforcement of OBBBA provisions by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. All told, according to energy researcher Rhodium Group, a total of $373 billion in clean energy investments are now at risk.
The pair of Oklahoma projects are likely to be joined by a rash of cancellations of planned solar and wind projects in the coming months, as developers determine they won't be able to meet the OBBBA's deadline of being placed in service by the end of 2027 to continue to benefit from the investment tax credit. Capital flight is also likely to become a rising problem as private equity and institutional investors reallocate capital to more profitable ventures with higher degrees of certainty. Some of that capital seems likely to end up being invested in gas generation capacity instead.
Where Do The Competing Booms Go From Here?
In a July 22 interview on Fox News Special Report with Bret Baier, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said he and the administration are for 'everything that works. Anything that can deliver affordable, reliable, secure energy.' Prodded by Baier, Wright gave a dim assessment for the wind industry's future in the United States, saying 'value of the energy [it generates] is very low - who knows when the wind's gonna blow - and there's been huge public opposition to onshore and offshore wind.'
But Wright's view of the future for the solar industry was more positive, saying, 'Solar is a different story. Solar is growing rapidly in the United States right now and I think it's got a future.' But, he added, 'The idea there was just it should have a commercial future not paid for by the taxpayers' future.'
Thus, the key for the solar industry to revive its boom times in the remaining 42 months of this second Trump presidency will be to develop sustainable business models which create solid, investable rates of return without major federal tax breaks or subsidies. That seems a major challenge given that, if such a model exists, it would likely have already been deployed.
Meanwhile, the natural gas industry will face challenges of its own. A slowing of the solar boom places added pressure on natural gas generation companies to mount a major, rapid expansion of new capacity in the parts of the country where it will be most needed. Some key states, like Texas, in which the AI industry is rapidly expanding have been and are likely to remain welcoming to gas generation. Policymakers in some other big AI states seem likely to need more convincing.
For an industry experiencing a current equipment procurement backlog and whose infrastructure has experienced significant ill-timed failures in recent years - like the freeze-ups in Texas during 2021's Winter Storm Uri - the ability to sustain its current boom and grow it into the future is not necessarily a foregone conclusion. Much work remains to be done.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
18 minutes ago
- New York Post
Japan records nearly 1 million more deaths than births in 2024 as country's population continues to plummet
Japan saw nearly 1 million more deaths than births in 2024, marking the country's steepest single-year population decline since the government surveys began nearly six decades ago. In 2009, Japan's population peaked at around 126.6 million, but has dropped steadily ever since, according to data published by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications on Wednesday. 4 Japan recorded nearly 1 million more deaths than births in 2024, according to new data. Anadolu via Getty Images Last year, two records were set: a low for births, and a high for deaths. Just 687,689 births were recorded in 2024, the lowest since the government first started keeping track in 1968. On the other end, a whopping 1.6 million people died, bringing the total population to 120 million, according to the data. 4 The birth rate in Japan has been on the decline since the 1970s. AFP via Getty Images The ever-growing natality crisis pushed the Japanese government to promote family-oriented policies including free childcare, expanded access to healthcare and shorter work weeks to in part help free up time for procreation. Even with the mass incentives, the birth rate continues to drop while more foreign residents seek to make Japan their new home. In 2024 alone, the number of foreigners living in Japan rose by 10% to a high of 3.6 million people, according to the data. The heightened presence of foreign residents combined with the shrinking natality spurred increased reports of xenophobia, racism and discrimination against newcomers. 4 The Japanese government has tried to impose numerous incentives for childbearing, including shortened work weeks. POOL/AFP via Getty Images The cycle in part is also worsened by Japan's elderly, who make up around 30% of the entire population, on top of the country's slim pool of youth and childbearing adults, according to the data. Japan's working-age population, falling between 16 and 64 years old, only makes up 59% of the population — a whole six points lower than the global average, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Between 2023 and 2060, the OECD estimates that the working-age population will dwindle by 31%. 4 The elderly make up approximately 30% of Japan's entire population. AFP via Getty Images Regardless of how many patches the Japanese government tries to propose, there's no overnight fix to birth rates and it will take additional decades for the population to bounce back. The government concluded that immigration may be their only solution. Models proposed by the Japanese government last updated in 2023 estimate the nationwide population will drop by 30% by 2070, but 'is expected to slow down slightly, mainly due to the increase in international migration.' In 2020, Japan announced its plans to fund artificial intelligence matchmaking systems to help hitch singles looking for love to hasten engagements and patch the sinking birth rate.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Trump's Ukraine deadline for Putin arrives - as uncertainty remains over possible meeting
Donald Trump has rowed back on an earlier claim that he will only meet with Vladimir Putin if Volodymyr Zelenskyy is also at the summit - as a US deadline for Moscow to avoid further sanctions arrives. said on Thursday that he hoped to meet the next week, with the summit potentially taking place in the United Arab Putin's announcement came on the eve of a White House deadline for Moscow to show progress towards ending the three-year-old war in Ukraine or suffer additional economic sanctions. Asked on Thursday if his deadline for Friday would hold, Mr Trump said of Mr Putin: "It's going to be up to him. We're going to see what he has to say. It's going to be up to him. Very disappointed." Asked if Mr Putin needed to meet Volodymyr Zelenskyy in order to meet him, Mr Trump said: "No, he doesn't." Sky News' US correspondent David Blevins said it was "very difficult to gauge the prospect for a meeting", with the last few days having left a number of questions unanswered - notably whether Russia is really more inclined to a ceasefire, and whether Mr Putin is ready to sit down with Mr Zelenskyy. "It's difficult to see why Putin would be prepared to dilute his red lines at this point," Blevins said. Two White House officials and a senior administration official have told Sky News that secondary sanctions on Russia are still expected to be implemented on Friday. Meanwhile, Mr Trump has said on his Truth Social account that he will be hosting the president of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, and the prime minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, at the White House for an "official Peace Signing Ceremony" on Friday. He added: "These two Nations have been at War for many years, resulting in the deaths of thousands of people. Many Leaders have tried to end the War, with no success, until now, thanks to 'TRUMP'." Mr Trump has long been hoping to add Ukraine to the list of wars he boasts of having stopped, claiming during the election last year he could do so in a single day, but has been frustrated since returning to office. Putin suggests he won't meet with Zelenskyy It comes after a White House official told the Associated Press that a US-Russian summit wouldn't happen if Mr Putin did not agree to meet with Ukrainian president Mr Zelenskyy, but the official later said it only made it less likely. When asked about the prospect of meeting with Mr Zelenskyy, Mr Putin said on Thursday: "I have already said many times that I have nothing against it in general, it is possible." However, he distanced himself from any such meeting happening soon, adding: "But certain conditions must be created for this. But unfortunately, we are still far from creating such conditions." Read more: White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has said Mr Trump wants to meet both leaders because he wants this "brutal war to end". She added: "The White House is working through the details of these potential meetings and details will be provided at the appropriate time." It is understood that the White House is preparing for the possibility of a bilateral or trilateral meeting as it remains unclear whether Mr Putin will be prepared to meet with the Ukrainian leader. Mr Zelenskyy said he had phone conversations with several European leaders on Thursday amid a flurry of diplomatic activity - as the Ukrainian government fears being sidelined by direct negotiations between Washington and Moscow.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
SoftBank shares surge to record after optimism for AI prospects boosted Q1 earnings
By Anton Bridge and Junko Fujita TOKYO (Reuters) -Shares in SoftBank Group jumped more than 13% to a record high on Friday morning in a show of investor support for the Japanese technology investor's AI push after first quarter profit beat expectations. SoftBank's share price hit 14,205 yen at the close of morning trading. SoftBank has announced a series of mammoth investments this year, including committing $30 billion to ChatGPT maker OpenAI, as well as leading the financing for Stargate - a $500 billion data centre project in the United States. The firm beat analysts' expectations to report a net profit of 421.8 billion yen ($2.87 billion) for the April-June quarter, compared to a loss in the same period a year ago. Market enthusiasm for AI-related companies also pushed up valuations for its portfolio of listed and unlisted technology companies such that SoftBank's loan to value ratio improved to 17% at the end of June compared to 18% at the end of March. The results were "evidence of SoftBank's quality diversified portfolio, strong underlying fundamentals, thematic/secular tailwinds for its equity holdings, and the resilience of its balance sheet," Macquarie analyst Paul Golding wrote in a note. SoftBank was the biggest contributor to gains for Japan's Topix index, which rose some 1.5% to trade above the 3,000 point mark for the first time in its history. The jump will provide some relief to SoftBank investors as its shares have traded at a more than 50% discount to the value of its assets over the past five quarters. "Active investors scooped up SoftBank Group shares to beat the Topix's gain," said Seiichi Suzuki, chief equity market analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Institute. "When the main indexes rise, they need to buy heavyweights that are rising. SoftBank's strong earnings and the Topix's gains came at the same time." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data