Not a legacy Trump wants to own

The White House scrambles to mitigate gasoline costs expected to rise with the Trump-branded Iran War. Meanwhile, China is already poised to profit. (“Like you’ve never seen”?)
A friend already regrets buying an electric vehicle now that Trump has defunded clean energy. Trump’s big bill slashed funding for building out the EV charging station network begun under Joe Biden. Trump eliminated EV tax credits last year, causing EV prices to soar, CNBC reported in August.
But China? E&E News by Politico reports that China is readying to become a clean energy powerhouse:
As Chinese officials meet in Beijing this week to identify the country’s top policies for the next five years, China watchers expect the country to continue prioritizing building a new energy system centered on renewables — and events in Iran aren’t expected to change that calculus.
“The country has definitely pulled all these triggers in the last few years to be prepared for a moment like this,” Ashish Sethia, managing director of BloombergNEF, an energy research firm, said in an email.
China has poured huge amounts of money into expanding manufacturing and critical minerals mining to fuel its explosive growth in clean technologies. In the first half of last year, China added more wind and solar facilities than the rest of the world combined, with more than a third of the country’s economic growth in 2025 coming from green technologies like electric vehicles.
So much winning … for the United States’ chief economic rival.
Bloomberg adds:
Europe and Pakistan largely rely on batteries and solar panels imported from China. In Europe, national security concerns have led to the Industrial Accelerator Act, which launched Wednesday with the goal of kickstarting clean tech domestic manufacturing to reduce dependence on Chinese goods.
Other countries that are friendly with China, though, have continued to buy its clean tech.
In Cuba, for example, energy shortages have long been a feature of life on the island, which has been under sanctions from the US for decades. Those have become more severe in the last year, prompting the government to turn to China for support building solar power and batteries.
Trump’s January “threat to impose tariffs on any country supplying Cuba with oil” will mean China’s renewables market in Cuba will expand (barring a U.S. invasion promoted by Trump Secretary of State Marco Rubio).
The Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University believes that the Iran War’s closing the Strait of Hormuz will impact China’s supply of liquified natural gas and accelerate “its orderly transition away from fossil fuels.” Erica Downs reports: “Half of China’s oil imports and nearly one-third of its LNG imports transit this waterway.” The impact is likely to further push China to expand its clean energy sector as the U.S. market suffers both from Trump’s oil fixation and his illegal war against Iran. The “conflict is likely to reaffirm Beijing’s commitment to transforming China into an ‘energy superpower‘ that derives strength from its leading role in deploying green energy technologies at home and abroad.”
It could have been us, meaning the U.S. But Trump’s ten-year jihad against green energy means turning the U.S. into an energy backwater (and perhaps an economic one) in the 21st century while China’s domination of the renewables market builds. Like American farmers losing their soybean markets, America’s retreat under Trump into the 20th century means we will lose the clean energy market as well.
So much winning.
(h/t SR)






