Decarbonize Weekly
📺 Decarbonize Deep Dive 011 | ~22 min DEEP DIVE: The One Big Beautiful Bill's Accidental Clean Energy Boom — and the Cliff Below It The One Big Beautiful Bill Act was designed to end the IRA era. Instead, it created the largest clean energy construction sprint in American history. Between 216 and 240 GWdc of solar capacity is being legally locked into IRA tax credit eligibility before the July 4, 2026 deadline — a volume equal to projected US solar installations through the end of the decade, compressed into a single 18-month race. Here is the paradox: an anti-renewable bill set a construction deadline, and that deadline created a mandatory forcing function that no market signal could replicate. Developers are pouring concrete at unprecedented speed. A record 86 GW of new US generating capacity is expected in 2026. The Georgetown Environmental Law Review called it potentially "the most significant short-term expansion of clean energy infrastructure in US history." The bill that was supposed to kill renewables accidentally supercharged them. But the cliff is as real as the boom. The 10-year US solar output projection under the OBBBA is 17% below the pre-OBBBA baseline. Battery storage retains ITC eligibility through 2033 — giving storage a 7-year advantage that solar and wind do not have. The IRS eliminated the 5% safe harbor rule in January 2026, requiring actual physical construction — not procurement. Transformer lead times of 2–4 years are locking out late entrants. And $222 billion in outstanding announced clean energy investment is racing against a calendar it was never designed for. Key topics: • What the OBBBA actually did to clean energy tax credits — the timeline, the technology asymmetries, and the FEOC restrictions • The July 4, 2026 construction deadline: what "begin construction" now legally means after the IRS eliminated the 5% safe harbor • Why 216–240 GWdc of solar is being safe-harbored — and how that compares to a full decade of projected US solar installations • Battery storage's separate runway: why storage gets ITC through 2033 while solar and wind face the cliff • The four bottlenecks killing late projects: transformers, interconnection queue, FEOC compliance, and labor competition • The project finance anatomy: how the ITC works as a tax equity financing mechanism, not a subsidy • The 17% long-term solar gap: what the 10-year US solar forecast actually shows under OBBBA • State-level responses: which state renewable portfolio standards are positioned to absorb what federal credits cannot sustain • Where battery storage goes from here: record 24 GW of US installations in 2026, AI data center demand, and the LFP dominance story • Three things to watch by end of 2026: actual construction starts vs. announced intent, IRS enforcement posture, and state policy responses This is a portrait of an industry in a timed sprint — aware of the cliff ahead, racing to get as much in the ground as possible before the deadline designed to stop it. --- 🔗 Website: decarbonizeweekly.com 📧 Contact: hello@decarbonizeweekly.com 🎧 Also on Spotify: search 'Decarbonize Weekly' #CleanEnergy #IRA #OBBBA #SolarEnergy #WindEnergy #BatteryStorage #EnergyTransition #ClimatePolicy #InvestmentTaxCredit #InflationReductionAct #OneBigBeautifulBill #USEnergy #FEOC #TaxEquity #RenewableEnergy #Decarbonization #SolarFarm #GridStorage #EnergyPolicy
15 episoder
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