The Jobs Plan. Joe Biden went to Pittsburg last night to pitch his vision for the infrastructure bill, dubbed the American Jobs Plan. You can see what’s included in the $2trillion spending bill here, or read the White House official bullet point fact sheet. This plan separates physical infrastructure from social infrastructure, a clear indicator that the White House hopes to get bipartisan support. Given that the spending is partially paid for with a proposed increase of the corporate tax rate to 28%, don’t expect smooth sailings.
A 10 Year ITC. For our industries, there is an unprecedented vision for EV charging infrastructure, likely to get charging companies excited about the future. More importantly, it proposes a 10-year extension of the ITC, expands the ITC for stand-alone energy storage, and likely brings it back to the 30% rate. All of this will be confirmed by the House version of the bill yet to be filed by leadership. A decade-long certainty for our industry will create a certain maturity overnight, no longer planning year by year and planning for the cliffs that leave us breathless during every extension fight.
The DC Fight Ahead. This is a bill without a roadmap, how and when it gets passed is TBD, but everyone knows it’s a good thing to build new and improved physical infrastructure. The GOP isn’t about to give Biden an easy win and they are surely not about to give back half of the corporate tax cut that they passed in 2017. Manchin stands out as the middle man, likely having orchestrated the split between physical and social infrastructure legislation leaving some room for the possibility that this gets passed on a 50/50 vote through reconciliation. McConnell is digging his heels in on the point that this type of spending can’t move forward without ways to pay for it and not allowing for it to be deficit spending which is exactly what every member of the republican party will likely say. There will be pressure on them, however, from their local communities that this is money well spent which will drive new economic growth and therefore pay for itself. It’s the climate bill for Biden’s legacy and I can see the inside game moving already, especially with 2 trillion reasons for businesses to get excited about the work coming up.
Big Wakeup Update. As many of you know, my new day job has me at FlexGen, the leading energy storage integrator in the Country. It’s early days but things are on a rocket ship for battery storage development and execution. I’ve been writing the ‘solar’wakeup for almost nine years and I think given that I am more of a solar+ guy these days, I thought we should brand the next nine years more appropriately. So I bring you to the big news, introducing batterywakeup.com, the most influential newsletter in all of the clean energy. It’s a great day for all of us and I’m excited about all the new stuff coming at us.
Free Series for Solar EPCs. I’ve teamed up with EagleView to host their Solar Business PowerSeries. Each month, we’re talking with experts on topics like LEAN and TQM, streamlining the solar permit process, deploying technology in solar, and more. This month, I’m talking with Jake Wachman from SunPower Corporation about how his company uses technology and automation to drive growth. If you’re a small- or mid-sized EPC who’s looking to improve your operations in 2021, sign up to join us live on April 8th. Registered users also gain access to the first two episodes on-demand.
- PV-Tech: Biden proposes 10-year ITC extension in US$2tn infrastructure investment plan
- Axios: Biden calls for massive climate and transit package
- The Hill: Five things to watch on Biden infrastructure plan
- Energy Storage News: Concurrent bidding into multiple merchant markets requires ‘dynamic’ appraisal of income and cycling
- Reuters: Apple to build battery-based solar energy storage project in California
- Utility Dive: Large consumers blame renewables for 2020 declines in C&I power reliability
- RMI: How Can Electric Trucks Draft off the Success of Passenger EVs?
Opinion
Best, Yann