The state is working on its third major climate bill in the last decade, after the past two propelled solar deployment and clean jobs.

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canary-weekly

7 March 2025

Hello, and welcome to Canary Media Weekly! As the Trump administration continues to roll back clean energy policy, it’s more clear than ever that states will have to lead on climate action. This week, we’ve got a story on how Illinois is doing just that.

Kathryn Krawczyk

Illinois-wind

Illinois proves states have a lot of power to advance clean energy

Illinois legislators and clean energy advocates have found themselves in a déjà vu moment: working on a package to accelerate their clean energy transition while federal opposition mounts.

 

The state’s path to climate action began eight years ago with the Future Energy Jobs Act, which devoted millions of dollars to clean energy jobs training, pushed utilities to create energy-efficiency programs, created a community solar program, and drove investment in renewables across the state. President Donald Trump had also just been sworn in for the first time, reinvigorating climate skepticism and renewable energy resistance on the national stage.

 

Despite the federal challenges, FEJA found success, and in 2021, it inspired the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which went even further on phasing out fossil fuels. The results have been clear: Illinois had only installed a tiny 80 MW of solar power statewide before FEJA’s passage and has since installed more than 3,500 MW, according to the state.

Illinoissolardeployment

That wouldn’t have happened if Illinois waited around for the White House to step up, James Gignac, of the Union of Concerned Scientists, told Canary Media’s Kari Lydersen earlier this year.

 

“States for many years have not been able to rely on the federal government for climate action, whether due to politics or the Supreme Court,” Gignac said. And while the new Trump administration “doesn’t fundamentally change the energy policy path that the state is on, it just makes it even more urgent that state legislators pass additional policies.”

 

So now, state lawmakers are working on another pair of bills to make sure things keep rolling, Kari reported this week. They aim to evaluate the state’s current power grid, make it easier to expand the transmission system, and add a ton of new battery storage to make sure the grid can handle a mandated transition to 100% clean energy by 2050. Illinois is already on its way to meeting that goal, as it has one of the cleanest grids in the nation thanks to bountiful nuclear power.

 

“In a Trump world, nothing feels certain,” Andrew Rehn, climate policy director of the environmental group Prairie Rivers Network, told Kari. “But this feels real.”

TWO MORE THINGS

Green bank uncertainty escalates

Recipients of federal “green bank” funding are in an increasingly tough spot. The eight nonprofits sharing the $20 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund have only ever been able to withdraw enough money to pay two weeks’ worth of expenses. It’s now been two weeks since Trump’s crusade against the program began, meaning they can’t access money for salaries, rent, and other costs. And the administration shows no signs of stepping back, as U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin this week asked his agency’s inspector general to investigate the green bank initiative.

California’s cloudy rooftop solar outlook 

Rooftop solar is more popular in the Golden State than in any other, but some analysts say the energy source is in part to blame for California's sky-high utility bills. Industry supporters say this is dead wrong, but two years ago, the state amended its rooftop solar incentives under this logic anyway — a move that caused installations to plummet and is now threatening even the largest solar firms. Sunnova announced this week it could run out of cash within the year.

 

Now, as Canary Media’s Jeff St. John reports, advocates fear deeper cuts are on the way as the debate over rooftop solar rears its head once again. On the other side of the country, similar discourse is threatening Maine’s net energy billing rules, Sarah Shemkus reports.

WHAT TO KNOW THIS WEEK

Tariff turmoil: President Trump pauses tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods falling under the United States-Mexico-Canada trade agreement days after implementing them, but Ontario Premier Doug Ford says a 25% surcharge on electricity sent to the U.S. will remain in place. (CNN, Politico) 

 

Offshore wind’s rebound: Despite political headwinds for the U.S. offshore wind industry, global installations are expected to rebound to 19 GW this year. The Vineyard Wind project off Massachusetts is among those scheduled for completion. (Rystad Energy, E&E News)

 

Clean cars rules roll on: The federal Government Accountability Office says the Biden administration’s approval of California’s clean cars rules — which will require all new cars sold to be zero-emission by 2035 — isn’t open to congressional repeal. (Reuters)

 

Electrifying the Empire State: New York gets one step closer to becoming the first state to essentially ban fossil-fuel use in new buildings as the state building code council approves draft rules that would require most new buildings to be fully electrified starting in 2026. (New York Focus)

 

The power of coordination: A new study envisions solving utilities’ coming demand struggles with an algorithm that could coordinate home batteries, rooftop solar, and other small generation as backup power sources for the rest of the grid. (Grist)

 

Carbon capture concerns: Conservative, rural Louisiana residents in oil-and-gas-producing parts of the state push back on proposed carbon capture projects over concerns about surface leaks, damage to aquifers, and their use of federal funding. (The Advocate)

 

Charger challenges: The Trump administration’s suspension of reliability standards for public EV chargers, if kept in place, will likely lead to fewer chargers being built along highways and more chargers falling into disrepair. (Grist)

Canary Media is an independent, nonprofit newsroom covering the transition to clean energy and solutions to the climate crisis. Donate to support us.

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