Webinar Recap: The Budget Bill’s Climate Impacts and What States Can Do

Download the Webinar Slide Deck

The budget reconciliation bill, signed into law by President Trump last week, guts federal climate and clean energy funding and is expected to eliminate American jobs, raise electricity prices, and worsen pollution and public health impacts across the country.

There’s a lot in the bill that state climate policy actors need to know, from what’s been lost to which opportunities arise at the state level. Climate XChange and Evergreen Collaborative provided an analysis of the reconciliation bill’s impacts to climate and clean energy, geared toward state-level advocates and policymakers.

Tony Sirna, Evergreen Collaborative – The Budget Bill’s Cuts to Climate, Clean Energy, and Other Key Sectors

Learn more by watching the webinar at 04:18

Tony’s presentation included the following climate and energy impacts stemming from the budget reconciliation bill: 

  • Overall climate, energy, and economic impacts of the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill.’
  • Clean energy: Inflation Reduction Act tax credit phaseouts (45Y and 48E), the new Foreign Entity of Concern (FEOC) requirements, transmission funding rescission, and amendments to financing through the Department of Energy’s Loan Program Office.
  • Transportation: Electric vehicle tax credit repeals (45W, 30C, 30D, and 25E).
  • Buildings: home efficiency tax credit elimination and amendments (25C, 45L, and 179D), and residential clean energy tax credit elimination (25D).
  • Manufacturing: tax credit repeal and amendments (45X and 48C) and the rescission of unobligated funds under the Advanced Industrial Facilities Deployment Program.
  • Fossil fuel extraction: oil, gas and coal handouts, and the rescission of unobligated funds within the methane waste reduction program.
  • Impacts to other key programs including the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, the Climate Pollution Reduction Grants, the Environmental Justice Block Grants, and the new opt-in fee for the NEPA review process.

Jordan Gerow, Climate XChange – State Policies to Fill the Gaps

Learn more by watching the webinar at 27:08

Jordan’s presentation included the following strategies states can employ to fill in the gaps left by the budget reconciliation bill:

Q&A

Hear the full Q&A by watching the webinar at 46:13

  • Will states be sued if they try to pass laws that replace federal policy? Could you speak to the risk of Trump’s State Overreach Executive Order and how this limits state power?
  • Can you say more about opportunities to phase out gas appliances? 
  • Do we have a timeline of when we will start feeling rates hike up for bill payers?
  • How concerned are you that previous leaders and emerging leaders on climate at the state level may backslide? I’m concerned that as the national policy supports are carved out, states will roll back previous support for climate and environmental policy.