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BYDDF 12.12-1.1%11:15 AM EST

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (2780)11/20/2025 7:41:59 AM
From: roto   of 2785
 
Electric car sales drive record quarter for cleantech investments









A line chart shows quarterly retail investment in distributed electricity and storage, heat pumps, and zero-emission vehicles from Q1 2018 to Q3 2025. Investments in zero-emission vehicles rose from $2.9 billion to $31.2 billion. Heat pumps peaked at $6.9 billion, and distributed electricity reached $5.6 billion.

  • Zero emission Vehicles
  • Heat pumps
  • Distributed electricity and storage




Consumers scrambling to take advantage of expiring tax credits for electric cars drove a record-breaking quarter of U.S. clean-energy investments, according to a new report.

Why it matters: It shows that policy matters, especially if it's coming or going.

  • The report by research firm Rhodium Group and MIT shows the real-time scramble of clean-energy industries in response to President Trump rescinding a range of subsidies in the recent tax law.
Driving the news: Clean-energy investments in the third quarter totaled $75 billion, according to the report.

  • This was largely fueled by a surge in sales in zero-emission vehicles (mostly electric cars), which reached $31 billion, a 32% increase from the previous quarter.
  • The federal EV tax credits expired at the end of the third quarter.
Reality check: This is poised to be a high-water mark for such investments, as other numbers point to declines.

  • Investments in the EV manufacturing sector, for example, dropped 30%, or $8 billion, compared to the same period last year.
The big picture: So far, the Trump administration's policy repeals are slowing down, not wholly reversing, trends toward cleaner energy.

  • Globally, EVs are rising in more countries even amid U.S. policy headwinds, though they remain heavily concentrated in China, the EU and U.S., according to a separate International Energy Agency study.


Between the lines: It's two steps forward, one step back.

  • Companies announced $6 billion in new clean energy manufacturing projects this past quarter — mostly for EVs and batteries.
  • But companies also canceled $2 billion worth of projects — also mostly battery manufacturing, Rhodium finds.
What's next: Tax credits for two other types of consumer-facing cleantech — heat pumps and distributed power and storage — are set to expire at year's end.

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