The Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) proposed ten facets of a strong solar industry under a Trump administration.
The Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) released a policy agenda report, outlining priorities for the industry under a Trump administration and the 119th Congress.
The plan places a focus on strengthening solar and energy storage in the United States as part of a broad goal of achieving energy independence and security. Environmental and climate change related reasons for supporting solar were omitted from the priority list.
The U.S. solar industry grew by 128% under President Trump’s first term in office, reaching 100 GW of total installed capacity, enough to power over 17 million homes, said SEIA.
“Solar is critical to meeting America’s growing need for electricity and providing power for manufacturing, data centers, cryptocurrency, and AI,” said SEIA president and CEO Abigail Ross Hopper. “This is a roadmap for the Trump administration and Congress to capitalize on strong federal solar and storage policies and achieve their vision of a dominant American energy sector.”
1. Support American energy dominance
The U.S. is currently #2 in solar power deployment and #3 in solar manufacturing globally. SEIA said the path to American energy dominance needs an “all of the above” strategy that includes strong solar and battery energy storage industries.
2. Eliminate dependence on China
The reshoring of the U.S. solar manufacturing supply chain is well underway. Continuing to grow solar, steel and electronics manufacturing in the United States would lessen reliance on China, said SEIA.
3. Surge American manufacturing
SEIA reports the solar and storage industry has already built over 100 new factories in 43 states, leading to the creation of 40,000 new jobs.
“Strong policies to support manufacturing and domestic demand will surge our manufacturing fleet, create more jobs and bring billions of dollars in new investments,” said SEIA.
4. Meet demand of data centers, AI, and cryptocurrency
After relatively flat demand growth for decades, the U.S. power grid is faced with rapidly-rising electricity needs to power innovations in artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency mining.
5. Cut red tape in energy sector
SEIA highlighted the fact that in some regions in the U.S., it can take seven years or more to connect to the power grid. The trade organization called this “unacceptable” and encouraged common-sense policies to make it easier for new power to join the grid.
6. Regulatory reform
“Regulatory overreach does not discriminate,” said SEIA. “We must eliminate wasteful and burdensome efforts to restrict infrastructure investments on federal lands, stifle competition, and impose undue EPA rules and regulations on used solar panels.”
7. Keep taxes low
SEIA said bipartisan tax policies have encouraged investment in solar for two decades.
“Solar is popular, employs over a quarter of a million Americans, and is critical to energy security and dominance. Keep taxes where they are in order for the solar and storage industry to continue to support local jobs, factories and economies,” said SEIA.
8. Support energy freedom
Rooftop solar and home batteries represent consumer choice and freedom from monopolized electricity markets.
“If consumers want to go solar, government shouldn’t stand in the way,” said SEIA.
9. Bring more jobs to U.S. heartland
Solar projects and manufacturing sites bring jobs. Today the biggest states for solar include Texas (#2), Florida (#3), North Carolina (#4), Arizona (#5), Nevada (#6), and Georgia (#7).
“We owe it to these workers and communities to keep their economies strong,” said SEIA.
10. Private property rights
Lawmakers have enacted policies across the United States that prevent private landowners from leasing their land for the development of solar facilities.
“The trampling of property rights must end and Washington must send a signal that competition, not regulators, set the rules of the road,” said SEIA.