If you want them, you’ll have to get them from China like everyone else.
US Energy Secretary Chris Wright: “I'm thrilled to report that after 35 years, on July 4th, we will end the subsidies for wind and solar projects”
Submitted 23 hours ago by Wudi@feddit.uk to mildlyinfuriating@lemmy.world
https://cdn.imgchest.com/files/3d063623bc95.mp4
Comments
BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
graycube@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
When you soften domestic demand, it will make the technology more accessible to non-US markets.
abbadon420@sh.itjust.works 22 hours ago
Are people falling fir this? What am I saying… I know people are. How disappointing!
baggachipz@sh.itjust.works 21 hours ago
They’re not falling for it, they’re loving it. Granted, they have been duped into loving it.
FartsWithAnAccent@fedia.io 18 hours ago
No sir, I don't like it.
NarrativeBear@lemmy.world 19 hours ago
Murica 👊🇺🇸🔥
GoatSynagogue@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
If something needs subsidies to be viable, it’s not viable. Sorry, but it’s the truth.
Government subsidies should not exist. It should be government funding in return for ownership.
Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus 20 hours ago
Cool, lets remove all subsidies from fossil fuel and nuclear power generation, including making them clean up their pollution instead of externalizing those costs, and lets see how well that goes.
GoatSynagogue@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
Yeah, they should. I’m all for that.
hemmes@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
Subsidies have always been about fostering new technologies and innovation.
- Electricity in rural homes: In the 1930s, private utilities often would not run power lines to rural areas because it was not profitable enough. The Rural Electrification Administration used federal loans to help local electric co-ops build out rural power infrastructure. Before that, only about 1 in 10 farms had electricity, while most urban homes already did. Today, obviously, electric service is a basic expectation almost everywhere.
- The internet: The internet’s roots trace back to ARPANET, a Defense Department/DARPA-funded research network created to connect computers and share digital resources. That publicly funded networking research laid the groundwork for the modern internet: email, web browsing, cloud apps, phones, business systems, and everything else that now runs daily life.
- GPS navigation: GPS was developed by the U.S. Department of Defense and remains a government-owned system. It was later opened for civilian use, which is why we now casually use it for maps, delivery routing, fleet tracking, aviation, farming, construction layout, timestamping financial systems, and finding the nearest pizza place.
- The Interstate Highway System: The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 created the Interstate Highway System as a massive federally backed infrastructure project. That public investment helped shape modern commuting, trucking, suburbia, logistics, road trips, distribution centers, and the way stores stock everyday goods.
- Microchips and semiconductors: Early integrated circuits were privately invented, but government demand from defense and space programs helped create the first major market. The U.S. military and NASA were early buyers of integrated circuits for missiles and space guidance systems, helping push the technology forward before it became cheap enough for consumer electronics. That helped lead to the chips in phones, cars, thermostats, routers, controllers, appliances, and BAS equipment.
- Phone cameras and digital imaging: Modern phone cameras owe a lot to NASA/JPL work on CMOS image sensors. NASA describes the CMOS image sensor as one of its most widespread spinoff technologies, enabling cell phone cameras, HD video, and modern digital imaging.
- Medical research and everyday medicine: A lot of drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, and medical knowledge start with publicly funded basic research before private companies commercialize the final products. NIH describes itself as the world’s largest public funder of biomedical research and says decades of NIH-funded work have driven advances in health and science.
The government absorbs early risk, funds infrastructure or basic research, creates a first market, and then private industry scales it into something ordinary people use every day.
AmyAye@nord.pub 19 hours ago
U.S. Spending Bill to Grant $40 Billion in Fossil Fuel Subsidies
[Renewable Energy Received Record Subsidies in 2024
](https://www.instituteforenergyresearch.org/renewable/renewable-energy-received-record-subsidies-in-2024/)
In the United States, new Treasury Department figures show that subsidies for wind and solar dwarf all other energy-related provisions in the tax code, costing $31.4 billion in 2024,
Hmmmm, interesting….
mechoman444@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
There’s no way right.
This has got to be an SNL skit.
There’s just no way that reality is like this now.
Azell@lemmy.world 22 hours ago
He is also the owner of an oil company.