Renewable Energy Tax Credit Policy Should Reflect Sector Reality
Technically Speaking Renewable energy hit a record 26% of US electricity generation in 2025, despite the rollback of clean-energy incentives. To some observers, that milestone may suggest an inevitable switch to renewables. But today’s renewable surge may be more of a lagging indicator of yesterday’s choices rather than current policy. Projects at utility scale take years to finance, permit, and build out—meaning many wind farms and solar arrays that came online in 2025 were likely funded under the Inflation Reduction Act’s far more generous subsidy policies. When Congress reforms energy tax credits, it should match sector realities. It would be better to adopt multi-year phaseout schedules written directly into statute than to have abrupt policy expirations that reflect the latest political developments. Energy infrastructure is built on timelines that don’t always neatly fit political cycles. Utility-scale wind or solar projects can take from three to seven ye...