America was already laps behind China in the race to dominate the clean energy industry, new data from Global Energy Monitor shows. President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful" spending bill will secure their position as a clean energy loser, experts told CNN.
The spending law Trump signed earlier this month knee-caps clean energy tax credits for wind and solar. Business leaders say it will raise electricity prices for businesses and consumers alike, as the cheapest electrons on the grid become more costly to build and are replaced with more expensive gas.
At the same time, pulling funds from the clean energy industry puts it on its heels just as it was looking to make gains toward more efficient technologies and better battery storage.
Meanwhile, China is currently building 510 gigawatts of utility-scale solar and wind capacity, according to Global Energy Monitor. It will be added to the eye-popping 1,400 gigawatts already online — five times what is operating in the US.
Read more about the economic battle to dominate the clean energy industry at the link in bio.
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Recent data shows the UK construction sector has entered its eighth consecutive month of decline. Analysts point to broader economic uncertainty and disruption in adopting low carbon design as key drags. Ambiguity around net zero Whole Life Carbon policies and slower integration of low Embodied Carbon materials are delaying progress, creating pressures on sustainable construction projects that require clarity on Whole Life Carbon Assessment and long-term Life Cycle Costing. The impact highlights the urgency of embedding environmental sustainability in construction through stronger governance and more consistent regulation.
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