logo
Cuts to clean energy tax credits will harm North Carolina, advocates say

Cuts to clean energy tax credits will harm North Carolina, advocates say

Yahoo10-03-2025

As the legal fight continues over whether the Trump administration can ignore climate spending laws passed by Congress, North Carolina advocates are preparing for the next brewing federal threat.
A Republican-led budget bill working its way through Congress aims to cut $2 trillion in programs to instead help pay for increased spending on the military and border security as well as tax cuts for corporations and higher-income earners. U.S. House Budget Committee Chair Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, recently referred to clean energy programs under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act as 'low-hanging fruit' for budget cuts.
Convincing Republicans in Congress that those programs are worth defending will be a critical priority in the coming weeks, advocates said in a call with reporters last week.
'We're trying to remind representatives who have a stake in this, most of whom are Republicans, that real harm may come to their constituents if these tax credits are taken away,' said Stan Cross, electric transportation director with the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Cross pointed to data from Atlas Public Policy and Utah State University showing that nearly three-quarters of the nation's $276 billion in clean energy manufacturing investments are in districts represented by Republicans.
Climate Power, a nonprofit communications group that organized the call, estimates the Inflation Reduction Act has already spurred over $20 billion in climatetech investments and created more than 17,000 jobs in North Carolina, most in Republican areas. That includes developments like Toyota's massive new EV battery plant in Randolph County.
But a web of tax incentives established by the 2022 law — helping to entice Toyota to manufacture electric vehicles in the United States and consumers to buy them — hangs in the balance before the Republican-controlled Congress, even if the courts decide the Trump administration can't unilaterally scrap other climate spending.
Cuts to those tax credits could slow North Carolina's shift to renewable energy, said Alex Campbell, public policy analyst with the N.C. Budget and Tax Center, during the Climate Power call. That would harm the environment and raise energy costs for Tar Heels, he said.
'It's worth emphasizing why these cuts are being pursued,' Campbell added. 'It's about funding tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy by destroying our public programs.'
Still, there's little indication so far that North Carolina's congressional delegation is poised to stand up for clean energy incentives. Among the 18 Republicans who last year urged House Speaker Mike Johnson to preserve the credits, none are from the Tar Heel State, and only one, Rep. Buddy Carter of Georgia, is from the Southeast.
Sen. Thom Tillis, generally regarded as the Republican who's friendliest to clean energy in Congress, voted against the Inflation Reduction Act. So did Republican Rep. Richard Hudson, whose district includes the Toyota plant, saying in a statement that the law would 'throw money at woke climate and social programs that won't work.'
Newly minted congressional Rep. Tim Moore, also a Republican, supported a bipartisan state law forcing Duke Energy to zero out its carbon pollution by 2050 when he was speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives. His district has three new clean energy developments, including a lithium-processing plant in Kings Mountain. But Moore may end up as a foe of the Inflation Reduction Act in Congress: He criticized it in a 2022 social media post for not effectively driving down inflation and last year urged a U.S. senator from his state to address 'problems' that he said the climate law created.
With Republicans retaining an extremely narrow majority in Washington, even a single vote could tip the scales, Cross said.
'Some of the votes are going to be fifty-fifty votes,' he said. 'So, there are points at which an individual representative going one way or another could be meaningful.'
While Congress debates the future of clean energy incentives, North Carolina House Democratic Leader Robert Reives said on the Climate Power call that he hopes the Republican majority in the state's General Assembly will help preserve the state's clean energy investments — but he's also concerned about 'negative' energy legislation.
'I'm worried,' he said, 'because over the last month, there's been a troubling tendency to follow whatever the federal government states instead of looking at what the effects are going to be for North Carolina.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Media files for Bitcoin ETF with SEC as company continues to entrench itself in the crypto world
Trump Media files for Bitcoin ETF with SEC as company continues to entrench itself in the crypto world

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Media files for Bitcoin ETF with SEC as company continues to entrench itself in the crypto world

The Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG) filed an S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a Bitcoin ETF. The ETF will be managed under TMTG's fintech brand, with the help of its existing financial partner Yorkville Advisors and The Trump Media & Technology Group continues its headfirst foray into the crypto world. On Thursday, TMTG, the parent company of Truth Social, announced it had begun the process of registering a Bitcoin ETF with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The ETF will operate under TMTG's fintech arm, Its official name will be the Truth Social Bitcoin ETF. What started as a small social media company with its flagship Truth Social product is quickly becoming a digital juggernaut with diverse businesses that also include a streaming product and a burgeoning fintech platform. Since the start of the year, TMTG has been formalizing its efforts to become a player in online finance and crypto. The latter in particular has attracted new and profound interest from President Donald Trump, who was TMTG's largest shareholder. (Before retaking office, Trump placed his TMTG shares in a trust controlled by his son Donald Trump Jr., who is on the company's board). Once a crypto skeptic, Trump has changed his tune, becoming a believer in digital currencies. new Bitcoin ETF will be launched in conjunction with two of TMTG's existing financial partners: Yorkville Advisors and according to an S-1 filing submitted to the SEC. Yorkville Advisors, a small financial firm that has been engaged in several financial transactions with TMTG since last July, will sponsor the ETF. Meanwhile, will serve as the custodian for the assets in the ETF, meaning it will safeguard them in a designated account. TMTG, Yorkville, and did not respond to Fortune's requests for comment. The new Bitcoin ETF will trade on the NYSE Arca, an exchange based in Chicago that was created in 2006 from a merger between the NYSE and Arca. The ETF launch is not TMTG's first Bitcoin-related move. Last month, announced it had raised $2.5 billion toward its own Bitcoin reserve. Funding came from roughly 50 institutional investors, according to TMTG. The transaction would place Bitcoin directly on the publicly traded TMTG's balance sheet. TMTG already had a strong balance sheet with roughly $759 million in cash and cash equivalents. TMTG CEO Devin Nunes called Bitcoin an 'apex instrument of financial freedom.' He framed the move as part of TMTG's effort to build a diversified portfolio of digital assets, which already included its various business segments like streaming and social media. 'It's a big step forward in the company's plans to evolve into a holding company by acquiring additional profit-generating, crown jewel assets consistent with America First principles,' Nunes said in a statement announcing TMTG's Bitcoin treasury. The idea of strategic cryptocurrency reserves is also gaining traction in the public sector thanks to Trump. In March, the president signed an executive order to create both a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile that would be owned by the Treasury Department. This story was originally featured on

Junk Fees, Airport Security, No Tax on Tips: 7 Travel Bills in Congress We're Tracking
Junk Fees, Airport Security, No Tax on Tips: 7 Travel Bills in Congress We're Tracking

Skift

time13 minutes ago

  • Skift

Junk Fees, Airport Security, No Tax on Tips: 7 Travel Bills in Congress We're Tracking

Although travel isn't at the top of Congress' agenda, lawmakers in Washington are discussing several bills that would impact the industry. Travel and tourism isn't at the top of Congress' agenda, which this month is dominated by debate over the President Donald Trump-backed 'big, beautiful' tax and spending bill. But that doesn't mean that lawmakers aren't attempting to make laws that would directly affect the hotel, lodging, air travel, and cruise industries. Here are seven such federal bills to watch heading into the summer: 1: Hotel Fees Transparency Act of 2025 Introduced by Rep. Young Kim (R-Calif.), this bipartisan bill targets 'unfair and deceptive advertising of prices for hotel rooms and other places of short-term lodging.' Bill co-sponsors include Reps. Kathy Castor (D-Fla.), Russell Fry (R-S.C.), Kevin Mullin (D-Calif.), Craig Goldman (R-Texas), Eugene Vindman (D-Va.) and André Carson (D-Ind.). The bill mandates that hotels and short-term rental providers must: Display the 'total services price, if a price is displayed, in any advertisement, marketing, or price list wherever the covered services are displayed, advertised, marketed, or offered for sale.' Disclose 'the total services price at the time the covered services are first displayed to [an] individual and anytime thereafter throughout the covered services purchasing process.' Disclose before a final purchase 'any tax, fee, or assessment imposed by any government entity, quasi-government entity, or government-created special district or program on the sale of covered services.' The bill passed the U.S. House on a voice vote in April. The U.S. Senate is now considering the measure. There, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) has introduced a Senate version of the Hotel Fees and Transparency Act of 2025, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Jerry Moran (R-Kansas), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) and Shelley Moo

ICE breaks arrest record two days in a row under Trump's new immigration directives
ICE breaks arrest record two days in a row under Trump's new immigration directives

Fox News

time13 minutes ago

  • Fox News

ICE breaks arrest record two days in a row under Trump's new immigration directives

Immigration and Customs Enforcement made a record-setting 2,368 arrests of illegal aliens in a single day on Wednesday, a senior ICE official told Fox News. This broke the record from just one day prior, as there were 2,267 ICE arrests on Tuesday. The increase comes after an average of roughly 1,600 arrests last week, as the White House pursues a goal of 3,000 arrests daily. "Under President Trump's leadership, we are looking to set a goal of a minimum of 3,000 arrests for ICE every day," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told "Hannity" on at the end of May, indicting that the goal could go even higher. Homan also previously said "The numbers are good, but I'm not satisfied. I haven't been satisfied all year long," in an "America's Newsroom" interview in May. The uptick in arrests can be attributed to a surge in worksite enforcement and immigration court arrests. In addition, ICE is using collateral, like arresting individuals who are not initial targets but are with a target at the time of an arrest. ICE sources tell Fox News if the reconciliation bill passes with funding for 10,000 additional ICE personnel and tens of thousands more ICE beds, numbers will be "supercharged and shoot through the roof." As a debate about the bill continues in the Senate, the White House reaffirmed the bill's border and immigration-related provisions on Thursday. "Did you know The Big Beautiful Bill doubles ICE detention capacity, increases ICE personnel by 50%, finishes the border wall, and taxes money illegals send to their home country?" Deputy Assistant to the President and Principal Deputy Communications Director Alex Pfeiffer posted to X. "It's a once-in-a generation opportunity to crack down on illegal immigration," he continued. The ICE arrests come amid widespread policy changes by the Trump administration from the Biden-era. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem approved more waivers for border wall construction in Arizona and New Mexico this week, and the president instituted a travel ban on several countries following the anti-Semitic Boulder terrorist attack, in which the suspect overstayed his visa.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store