
Data center owners urge US Treasury to keep renewable energy subsidy rules
Data Center
Coalition, which represents
data center owners
including
,
Amazon
and
Microsoft
, called on
U.S. Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent to uphold existing rules for wind and solar energy subsidies, saying they have enabled the industry to grow quickly and stay ahead of competition from China.
Tougher rules on how projects can qualify for federal
clean energy tax credits
could slow development of new electricity generation at a time of surging power demand driven by artificial intelligence and the digital economy.
"Any regulatory friction that slows down deployment of new generation today directly impacts our ability to meet AI-era electricity demands tomorrow," the coalition wrote in its letter to Bessent. The letter is dated August 4 but was seen by Reuters on Friday.
President Donald Trump issued an executive order in July directing Treasury to tighten clean energy tax credit rules, including redefining what it means for a project to have started construction.
The industry has relied on the existing rules for the last decade, and advisory firm Clean Energy Associates projected this week that the United States could lose about 60 gigawatts of planned solar capacity through 2030 if stricter "beginning of construction" rules are implemented.
Between 2017 and 2023, the U.S. data center industry contributed $3.5 trillion to the nation's gross domestic product and directly employed over 600,000 workers, according to the DCC.
The Treasury Department is expected to issue updated guidelines as soon as August 18.
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