Despite Democratic leadership in the House opting against previous proposals, supporters like Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.), chief deputy whip, told POLITICO that Ways and Means Chair Richard Neal (D-Mass.) had expressed his intention to include language to extend renewable energy tax credits into legislation moving through the chamber.
Democrats prepare to push clean energy in recovery packages
The push from rank-and-file Democrats that had been done behind closed doors previously has started to spill into the open.
June 08, 2020
House Democrats are ratcheting up pressure to insert financial help for clean energy into any upcoming bills to try to aid the pandemic-ravaged sector, setting up a clash with GOP lawmakers who’ve so far derided attempts to aid renewables as a furtive bid to implement the Green New Deal.
Clean energy groups say the sector has shed 600,000 jobs since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, and they are increasingly leaning on their Democratic allies in Congress to deliver assistance beyond the Paycheck Protection Program and small business loans that have already been rolled out.
A spokesperson for the committee said Neal is “intent on moving legislation related to green energy and efficiency in tandem with the Congress’ efforts on infrastructure," and that the effort would begin with a discussion draft of clean energy tax credits.
Rep. Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.), chair of the House Energy and Commerce Environment and Climate Change Subcommittee, said he was convinced House leadership would include help for the sector in upcoming legislation.
"There's a challenge here for us — in a comeback — not to just let it happen but to orchestrate it and to design it," he said in a Friday interview. "It's an opportune time to take the crisis and work it into an opportunity."
The push from rank-and-file Democrats that had been done behind closed doors previously has started to spill into the open. Dozens of Democrats urged leaders to prioritize the clean energy sector in a letter spearheaded by Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) and Tonko, which drew a statement from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer that clean energy should “be a major focus of our recovery.”
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), a senior member of the Ways and Means Committee, is circulating a letter, obtained first by POLITICO, calling on House Democratic leaders to allow renewable energy tax credits to be received as a direct payment, a key change sought by the industry since the tax credits have little value as companies rack up losses during the economic downturn. And it calls for lengthening the phase-out period for the tax incentives, since the Production Tax Credit for wind power developers sunsets at the end of this year and the solar Investment Tax Credit will be eliminated for residential systems and decline by more than half for large installations in 2022.
“This industry needs economic relief, and Congress must act soon,” the letter says. “Investments in clean energy pay back dividends because of the breadth and geography that are impacted — either job losses will devastate the communities we represent, or economic relief for this sector will help them weather this crisis.”
Democratic Reps. Nanette Barragán and Jared Huffman of California, Alcee Hastings of Florida, Chellie Pingree of Maine and Brenda Lawrence of Michigan are circulating “a green stimulus framework letter” with an eye toward releasing it in late June, according to Barragán’s office. The efforts are especially encouraging, several in the environmental community said, as the letters came about organically without a nudge from the industry.
But Republicans remain skeptical of any push to aid the sector. Senate Environment and Public Works Chair John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) denounced an infrastructure framework put out by House Democrats, seen as a possible vehicle for the aid, as “a laundry list of liberal priorities” and “a second ‘Green New Deal’” in an op-ed.
Louisiana Rep. Garret Graves, top Republican on the House Climate Crisis Committee, said efforts to aid the clean energy sector were an "incredibly tone deaf move or priority right now.”
“Here you have one of the worst economic recessions," he said. "And folks are out there prioritizing distorting markets for a technology that they have all repeatedly on record been saying that these are cost competitive.”
Graves dismissed his party’s invocation of the Green New Deal as “messaging crap” but said the pursuit of clean energy is “from a policy perspective, I just think that it's the wrong move.” He said Democrats must at minimum advance a strategy for making the U.S. renewable energy manufacturing supply chain less reliant on Chinese rare earth and strategic minerals if they seek those investments.
Even though Democrats have not cited the Green New Deal resolution in their push for industry support, many Republicans, including President Donald Trump, have repeatedly brought up the plan issued last year by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) that seeks a speedy overhaul of the U.S. economy to fight climate change.
“The Green New Deal would kill our country," Trump said Friday at the White House. "It’s impossible for them to do it. If you ever look at what they want to do under the Green New Deal, it’s like baby talk.”
By: Anthony Adragna
Source: Politico
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