Congress Is Giving Energy Lobbyists a 3-Year Window to Keep Up to $2 Trillion in Subsidies
The "one big, beautiful bill" keeps the corporate welfare that Republicans claim to hate.

The House of Representatives passed its "one big, beautiful bill" on Thursday. The sweeping domestic policy legislation includes extensions of President Donald Trump's 2017 tax cuts, increased funding for immigration enforcement and defense, and work requirements for Medicaid. The legislation is expected to add $2.3 trillion to the deficit.
Notably, the bill accelerates the phaseout of several green energy subsidies that were passed in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Starting in 2028, the bill's technology-neutral production and investment tax credits for clean electricity will be fully phased out. (Earlier drafts of the bill left a partial credit available through 2032.) To qualify for these tax credits, projects will need to begin construction within 60 days of the bill's enactment, reports The Hill. Tax credits for nuclear power will remain untouched through 2031. The energy clawbacks in an earlier version of this bill were estimated to raise $515 billion in revenue.
While rollbacks are better than keeping these tax credits fully intact, the bill falls woefully short by not repealing the IRA completely.
Signed into law in 2022, the IRA extended tax credits for green energy resources and created new ones for emerging technologies. The slew of new credits and subsidies was originally expected to cost $271 billion over 10 years. Within a year of its passage, the price tag of these provisions climbed to $536 billion and now stands at $1.2 trillion over 10 years. A recent analysis from the Cato Institute estimates that these subsidies could cost $1.97 trillion through 2034 and reach $4.67 trillion by 2050. One of the drivers of projected cost increases is the IRA's technology-neutral tax credits that have no sunset date and would only expire when a 75 percent reduction (compared to 2022 levels) in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the electricity sector is achieved.
For some climate hawks, these costs may be a small price to pay for tackling climate change. But it's important to note that the IRA, which was heralded as "the boldest climate bill ever" when it was passed, has done a poor job at reducing GHG emissions.
"I don't think you could throw that much money at industry and have nothing happen, but the latest emission data shows a lot less [emission reduction] than the initially projected benefit," Philip Rossetti, senior fellow at the R Street Institute, tells Reason. Rossetti says it may take "some time" before hard numbers are available, but it's "fair to say that the subsidies are under performing as a climate policy."
While the IRA has failed as a climate policy, it has succeeded as a wealth transfer program. Wealthy households have been the largest beneficiaries of the bill's tax credits for energy efficiency and electric vehicles. Meanwhile, over 90 percent of claimed green energy tax credits have gone to corporations with annual revenue of $1 billion or more.
There are few things as permanent as a federal subsidy. By keeping these tax credits alive, Congress is giving industry groups a three-year runway to ramp up their lobbying efforts and keep these provisions in place. As the Cato Institute's Adam Michel and Joshua L. Loucks write, "Subsidy-dependent industries don't need a long offramp; they need a clear signal that the taxpayer-funded gravy train is over."
With the bill now moving to the Senate, the House's accelerated rollback might be the closest thing we see to a full repeal of the IRA. Energy lobbyists have begun to plead their case and several Republicans have called for a "targeted" approach to IRA reform. Others have said the House's cuts to green energy tax credits won't work.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
>>The "one big, beautiful bill" keeps the corporate welfare that Republicans claim to hate.
please define which Republicans thanks.
"The IRA ... has succeeded as a wealth transfer program. Wealthy households have been the largest beneficiaries of the bill's tax credits for energy efficiency and electric vehicles. Meanwhile, over 90 percent of claimed green energy tax credits have gone to corporations with annual revenue of $1 billion or more."
Fits right in-line with D.C.'s income 5-TIMES... YES; 5-TIMES more than mostly (80%) any other state in the union. This isn't about defending Individual Liberty or ensuring Justice for all. It's all about lazy P.O.S. criminal minds taking over the government and using it to commit massive 'armed-theft' against the people.
As [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism] or Communism is always all about.
Utilities are also one of the industries in the USA with the highest average salaries. Lobbying is the highest return investment in the world.
Funny how Reason puts 100% of the responsibility for the budget in republicans when they’re win charge, but largely gives democrats a pass outside of some occasional milquetoast lamentation about deficits.
Clinton and Obama handed off very good budget situations to the next Republican president. Kamala would have had the budget manageable by 2026. What Republicans are doing is insanity and the problem is no negative consequences will be felt in the next several years because the debt will be the problem of Americans not born yet.
Trump can't cut enough! Hey, STOP CUTTING THINGS! -Reason
Um, isn't this an article criticizing not cutting these "green" subsidies?
They get cut in three years. Reason can see into the future that lobbyists might change that.
$8 trillion added to the debt in his first term and I guess he’s trying to outdo himself??
""While the IRA has failed as a climate policy, it has succeeded as a wealth transfer program.""
So it succeeded where expected.
You do realize we had an energy crisis from 2001-2009 that undermined the economy?? Big Oil failed America! What Biden did was invest in renewable energy when energy is cheap which is the best time to invest in alternatives to fossil fuels because when they are expensive, like 2007/08, it’s too late!!
Tax credits are not subsidies. Why do HyR bloggers, or Cato, write as if every dollar not taken in tax is the same as disbursement from the treasury?