Could Iran Restore U.S. Wind/Solar Tax Credits?
Andy DeVries, CFA: Head of Investment Grade, Head of Utilities
Nick Moglia, CFA: Senior Analyst, Utilities
Diego Espinosa Valdez: Analyst, Utilities
13 April 2026
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How geopolitics could reignite policy support for renewables and reshape power market expectations.
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What signals to watch from Washington as clean energy incentives reenter the legislative spotlight.
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Why U.S. Wind and Solar Tax Credits matter for project pipelines, financing demand, and issuer narratives.
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How shifting party dynamics could influence timelines for credit extensions and phaseout reversals.
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Which utilities and renewables platforms could see the clearest credit ripple effects from policy shifts.
Executive Summary
We anticipate multiple political and energy pressures driving renewed support for clean energy incentives. Historical patterns show these incentives often reappeared after prior expirations across party lines.
Attention remains fixed on global fuel disruptions, yet clean energy consequences receive far less discussion. However, geopolitical shocks previously accelerated supportive policies toward alternative power sources.
Political outcomes and investment locations complicate assumptions about partisan resistance to clean technologies. Economic benefits accruing locally can soften opposition even among traditionally skeptical stakeholders.
Separate analyses consider transportation and household energy incentives that lapsed following recent legislation. These changes influence expectations for future growth across renewable generation segments.
Looking ahead, broad cooperation could restore various incentives while similar shifts unfold internationally. Meanwhile, market effects would favor cleaner assets while pressuring conventional power producers.



