States That Outlaw or Restrict Solar Panels
The Department of the Interior has created additional bureaucratic huddles for solar projects near federal lands, slowed permitting reviews to a craw, and cancelled the review of the
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The Department of the Interior has created additional bureaucratic huddles for solar projects near federal lands, slowed permitting reviews to a craw, and cancelled the review of the
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Federal solar tax credits, both residential & utility-scale, are on the chopping block. Learn what this legislation means, and how to be grandfathered in.
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The Department of the Interior has created additional bureaucratic huddles for solar projects near federal lands, slowed permitting reviews to a craw, and cancelled the review of the
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Proposed changes to Inflation Reduction Act tax credits, solar tariffs, restrictions on wind energy, orders promoting fossil fuels, and a push for energy-related deregulation are just a few of the
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Residents and local restrictions are delaying and blocking renewable energy projects in the United States at an accelerated rate, according to a study from Columbia University.
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Congress and President Trump just passed legislation to cut the 30% residential solar tax credit in 2026—nearly a decade ahead of schedule. For homeowners considering solar, act now to
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Restrictive local ordinances on wind, solar, and battery storage construction could keep hundreds of U.S. counties from participating in the renewable energy transition, according to a new
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On June 16, as part of the Budget Reconciliation process (aka the “One Big Beautiful Bill”), the Senate Finance Committee is proposing changes to clean energy credits created by the
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The House Natural Resources Committee approved bipartisan legislation Thursday meant to accelerate federal approvals of infrastructure and energy projects, a reform that members of both parties...
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On July 7, 2025, the president issued an executive order (the EO) directly targeting ITCs and PTCs for solar and wind facilities. The EO directs Treasury to issue new “beginning of
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Paradoxically, the states most likely to do this are some that would greatly benefit from solar power, like Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. This article will list all the states with the largest
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