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Clean Energy Resilience: Global Growth Offsets U.S. Policy Cuts and Federal Shutdown Impact
Published 3 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows resilience amid U.S. policy turbulence, with global partnerships offsetting domestic cuts. Clean Air Task Force's Q4 2025 analysis reveals U.S. investments hit 730 million dollars in industrial projects, led by hydrogen at 410.9 million dollars, down 130 million from Q3, while cancellations surged to 1.4 billion dollars, including Plug Power's Texas and New York sites and 1.8 billion in sustainable aviation fuel like Shell's Louisiana project.[1][3]
A 43-day federal shutdown ending recently slowed permits from EPA and DOE, terminating 321 awards worth 7.56 billion dollars, with hundreds more in limbo, hitting hydrogen hubs hard.[1][3] Wind saw 1 billion dollars canceled by Invenergy, citing economics.[1] Yet renewables added nearly 700 gigawatts globally in 2025, reaching 5,149 gigawatts.[3]
Bright spots include today's Sunotec-Blackstone equity deal for grid integration and expansion.[6] Pasig City's pact with ACEN targets 100 percent renewables for public facilities via solar, wind, and geothermal.[2] TotalEnergies and Masdar's 2.2 billion dollar Asia JV manages 3 gigawatts now, with 6 more by 2030, blending solar, wind, and storage amid 500 gigawatts added regionally last year.[4]
Leaders respond boldly: Aligned Data Centers secured 31 megawatts battery storage from Calibrant.[1] Unlike Q3's stability, Q4 uncertainty from OBBBA tax tweaks and FEOC rules narrows credits, but storage pivots to data centers signal adaptation.[3] Asia's demand boom contrasts U.S. woes, with no major price spikes or supply shifts noted yet. Community lenders eye green financing growth.[9] Overall, policy headwinds spur international bets, proving sector grit.(298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
A 43-day federal shutdown ending recently slowed permits from EPA and DOE, terminating 321 awards worth 7.56 billion dollars, with hundreds more in limbo, hitting hydrogen hubs hard.[1][3] Wind saw 1 billion dollars canceled by Invenergy, citing economics.[1] Yet renewables added nearly 700 gigawatts globally in 2025, reaching 5,149 gigawatts.[3]
Bright spots include today's Sunotec-Blackstone equity deal for grid integration and expansion.[6] Pasig City's pact with ACEN targets 100 percent renewables for public facilities via solar, wind, and geothermal.[2] TotalEnergies and Masdar's 2.2 billion dollar Asia JV manages 3 gigawatts now, with 6 more by 2030, blending solar, wind, and storage amid 500 gigawatts added regionally last year.[4]
Leaders respond boldly: Aligned Data Centers secured 31 megawatts battery storage from Calibrant.[1] Unlike Q3's stability, Q4 uncertainty from OBBBA tax tweaks and FEOC rules narrows credits, but storage pivots to data centers signal adaptation.[3] Asia's demand boom contrasts U.S. woes, with no major price spikes or supply shifts noted yet. Community lenders eye green financing growth.[9] Overall, policy headwinds spur international bets, proving sector grit.(298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI