Big? Definitely ...
but Colorado utilities see no beauty in Trump's reconciliation budget bill

Big? Definitely ...

An EV juices up in the Roaring Fork Valley. Trump's budget bill, which seeks to gut tax credits for renewable energy, has Colorado utilities worried rates will go up in the face of uncertainty and that progress made in renewables in recent years will be erased./ Photo courtesy Holy Cross Energy

Allen Best / Big Pivots - 06/12/2025

Two Republican U.S. representatives from Colorado, Jeff Hurd and Gabe Evans, will be walking a tight rope posed by Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. How exactly will they explain why they voted for the sprawling 1,000-page bill, which, if adopted, would certainly raise electricity rates and slow the adoption of electric vehicles. Together with the topsy-turvy tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump on China, the bill may help drive up prices of gas-fueled cars and trucks, too.

In Durango, La Plata Electric Association already has seen impacts of the yet-to-be-passed bill. The electrical cooperative received bids for its all-sources solicitation for 150 megawatts of generation. Wind, solar, natural gas – even geothermal and nuclear – were eligible. But because of uncertainty over federal tax incentives, all bids were higher than otherwise expected.

Chris Hansen, LPEA’s CEO, said most interesting to him were impacts of the proposed bill coupled with Trump’s 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum. The cost of new electrical transformers has already gone up significantly.

We discussed development of so-called emerging technologies like geothermal. Developers need long-term certainty to justify their investments. “They’re much more difficult to do if you have policy uncertainty,” Hansen said.

Hurd and Evans were among 21 Republican representatives in March who signed a letter to legislative leaders asking for clean energy tax credits to be preserved to “increase domestic manufacturing, promote energy innovation and keep utility costs down.” Hurd signed another letter in May asking that the incentives for innovation in nuclear energy remain.

Trump visited Capitol Hill two days before the vote on his bill, threatening any Republicans to expect opposition in their primaries if they voted no. Two did anyway, although two others did not vote and one merely showed up. All Democrats opposed the bill.

Evans won election last November by a whisker in the purplish Eighth Congressional District, north of Denver. Hurd has a more comfortable margin in the Republican-leaning Third Congressional District. It covers much of the Western Slope and sprawls eastward to Pueblo and within shouting distance of Oklahoma.

Colorado, particularly along the Front Range, has become a hotspot for energy innovation and investment. Will a contraction occur if the House bill survives Senate scrutiny?

Vestas, the manufacturer of blades and nacelles for wind turbines at factories in Brighton and Windsor, invested $40 million in expansion and hired 700 people in expectation of orders for 1,000 turbines in 2025. 

At Namaste Solar, in Boulder, chief executive Jason Sharpe said he is unsure whether to plan for expansion or contraction. “As a business owner, how do you plan a business with this amount of uncertainty, trying to thread the needle between coping with political change and not creating panic among my employees? It’s challenging,” he said.

Republicans hold a three-vote advantage in the Senate, but four Republican senators in April sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune cautioning against “the full-scale repeal of current credits.”

And Evans was among 13 Republicans in the House who filed a letter June 6 to Thune calling for the Senate to “substantively and strategically improve clean energy tax credit provisions” in the budget reconciliation bill.

“We just hit half-time. We’re still very much in the middle of this game,” Harry Godfrey, of Advanced Energy United, a national industry association that monitors Colorado and 16 other states, said.

“They really went after just about everything that they could in the realm of clean energy and electric vehicles,” Will Toor, who directs the Colorado Energy Office, said. “I would certainly hope that cooler and wiser heads will prevail in the Senate.”

Soon after the House vote May 22, Sen. Michael Bennet got an earful from leaders of Xcel Energy, Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association and other Colorado electrical utilities.

“This casts a broad shadow on lots of the progress that the state has made in terms of power supply,” United Power CEO Mark Gabriel told Bennet.

“I am a practical businessman. I don’t have dreadlocks. I don’t wear Birkenstocks. This is not a crusade,” Gabriel said in a later interview. At issue, he emphasized, is resource adequacy and reliability for his utility, which serves one of Colorado’s fastest-growing areas north and east of Denver, including many oil and gas operations. Because electricity is increasingly used in oil and gas extraction and transport, it could raise their fossil fuel costs, too.

“These tax credits are critical to keeping costs, and therefore rates, stable for our members,” CORE Electrical Cooperative said. CORE serves Castle Rock and south-metro areas – including part of the district of Rep. Lauren Boebert, who voted for the bill.

Holy Cross Energy has a goal of 100% emission-free electricity by 2030. In October and April it surpassed 90%. For 2025, it expects to end up north of 80% compared to 50% just a few years ago – while maintaining among the lowest electrical rates in Colorado.

One of its programs, Power+FLEX, would be especially impacted by the bill. It encourages Holy Cross members to install batteries in a way that benefits the homes and businesses but also allows Holy Cross to draw upon them when needed. Loss of the tax credit will make batteries more expensive, dampening future participation.

The bill before the Senate is indeed big. Beautiful? Not to Colorado’s electrical utilities. 

This was extracted from a deeper dive on the budget reconciliation bill that can be found at BigPivots.com.