Canceled low-income solar grants set up legal fight with Trump, states


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Summary

Funding canceled

The EPA wants to rescind $7 billion for low-income solar projects, calling the program a “boondoggle” that diluted taxpayer dollars by passing through multiple levels of bureaucracy and citing recent legislation as the legal basis for canceling grants.

Ongoing plans

The funding was announced in April 2024, with $4.2 billion flowing to states and the rest to local government, nonprofits and Tribes. The states then execute programs individually, and some were expecting to open applications this year.

Legal fight

The EPA’s decision is likely to face lawsuits because it rescinds grant funding that has already been obligated. Despite already having signed legal agreements to disperse funds, the EPA believes the One Big, Beautiful Bill changes its legal obligation.


Full story

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to rescind $7 billion in grants for bringing solar power to low-income communities. The move is part of the Trump administration’s ongoing cuts to government support for renewable energy that could jeopardize the efforts of 60 state agencies, Native American tribes and nonprofits that were awarded funds in 2024.

EPA administrator Lee Zeldin cited the recent passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which he said eliminated the Solar for All program, adding that the decision will save taxpayer money.

“EPA no longer has the statutory authority to administer the program or the appropriated funds to keep this boondoggle alive,” Zeldin said in a social media post on Thursday.

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The administration claims the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF), which administers the Solar for All program, was riddled with “financial mismanagement, conflicts of interest, and oversight failures.” The EPA pointed, without substantiating evidence, to $20 billion in grants that it said were wrongly distributed to political allies of the Biden administration.

The attempted rollback of funding for the Solar for All program will likely face legal challenges from organizations that were counting on the grants. Zeldin’s announcement comes as electricity bills across the country are rising, and the $7 billion solar grant program was designed to help lower electric bills for communities in need. The Trump administration, however, has criticized solar power as unreliable, and this is just the latest action to reverse Biden-era policies that supported renewable energy.

What is the Solar for All program?

Passed as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, the Solar for All program was set up to provide 900,000 low-income households with solar power as part of the Biden administration’s efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 

In April 2024, the EPA unveiled selections of 60 recipients. More than half of the money — about $4.2 billion — went to state agencies. The states determine the best way to administer their allocated funds. This approach of allowing states to create their own process is typical for large federal grant programs.

For example, New Mexico received a $156 million grant. The Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department will distribute funds for solar projects benefitting low-income households earning at or below 80% of the area median income or those already enrolled in federal assistance programs. Solar contractors and installers will receive funding through a competitive bidding process, while apartment building owners can also access grants to install solar systems that benefit their tenants. New Mexico planned to start the application process later this year.

In his announcement, Zeldin said the grant program “diluted” taxpayer funds by passing through multiple organizations and called the program a “green slush fund.”

Can the EPA legally take grant money away? 

In addition to slashing tax credits for wind and solar power, the OBBBA also repealed the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.

In attempting to cancel the $7 billion solar grant program, Zeldin said he is following the law, after President Donald Trump signed the bill on July 4. Already, the EPA faces lawsuits from recipients of grants under other Biden-era programs. 

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The Trump administration is seeking to cancel the $7 billion Solar for All grant program that sent $4.2 billion to state agencies for low-income solar programs.

Jillian Blanchard, a vice president at the nonprofit coalition Lawyers for Good Government, said the Trump administration’s rationale for canceling solar grants is “absolutely ludicrous,” in a Canary Media article. Blanchard, who is involved in a lawsuit against the EPA’s removal of other environmental grants, added that the key legal classification is obligated versus unobligated grants.

Federal grants are considered obligated once a final contract is signed between the grant recipient and a federal agency. Sometimes, grant recipients are announced, but the agreements are not complete, making those awards unobligated. Only $19 million in the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund remained unobligated when Trump signed his signature bill, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Blanchard said the bill “only rescinded unobligated grant funds.” The Trump administration, however, disagrees, and lawsuits over Solar for All grants are very likely.

Kym Meyer, litigation director at the Southern Environmental Law Center, told The Associated Press that if the Trump administration proceeds, “we will see them in court.”

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Why this story matters

The EPA’s decision to terminate $7 billion in Solar for All grants highlights how shifts in federal policy can impact renewable energy progress, low-income household support and legal disputes over the authority to rescind obligated public funds.

Federal energy policy

Changes in federal policy under President Donald Trump’s administration have resulted in the rollback of major renewable energy grants, affecting planned solar projects nationwide and signaling a broader shift in government support for clean energy.

Legal and political disputes

The termination is expected to prompt legal challenges from grant recipients and has already sparked debate over the legality and justification of rescinding obligated federal funds, reflecting ongoing polarization over climate and energy policy.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 106 media outlets

Behind the numbers

Most sources report that the $7 billion Solar for All program was intended to support solar installations for over 900,000 low-income households with an estimated savings of $350 million per year in utility costs. Only about $53 million had been spent so far.

Debunking

There is no indication in the articles that the grants were misused as the EPA claims; lawsuits and some judges have thus far blocked similar attempts to freeze funds, with courts finding no legal basis for immediate contract suspensions.

Quote bank

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said, "EPA no longer has the statutory authority to administer the program or the appropriated funds to keep this boondoggle alive." Sen. Bernie Sanders responded, "Sabotaging this program isn’t just wrong—it’s absolutely insane."

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the Trump administration’s termination of the $7 billion Solar for All program as an “assault” on affordable, clean energy, emphasizing the devastating impact on low-income communities and portraying the move as obstructionist “roadblocks” prioritizing fossil fuel profits.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right characterize the same action as “responsible stewardship” reclaiming taxpayer dollars from “boondoggle” subsidies that distort energy markets, highlighting inefficiencies of renewables via “energy density” critiques and federal land use debates.

Media landscape

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106 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • The Trump administration plans to terminate $7 billion in grants for the Solar for All program, which aimed to assist low- and moderate-income households in installing solar panels, according to two anonymous sources.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency is drafting termination letters to 60 grant recipients, indicating a push to retract funds from a program initiated under the Inflation Reduction Act.
  • Sen. Bernie Sanders, who championed the program, expressed concern over its future and the potential impact on families.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Aug. 4, 2025, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum issued a secretarial order requiring Interior agencies to evaluate new renewable projects based on capacity density, potentially barring permits unless they match fossil fuel or nuclear standards.
  • Amid broader rollback of leasing, the Interior Department paused renewable leasing in January and last week, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management closed off 3.5 million offshore acres for wind.
  • Amid capacity density scrutiny, the DOI found federal lands supply about 4% of renewable energy, with 4 projects on over 500,000 acres under review.
  • Facing legal pushback, critics say policy favors fossil fuels and may prompt lawsuits from developers like the Rough Hat Clark Solar Project, risking higher costs for consumers.

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Key points from the Right

  • Interior Secretary Doug Burgum issued an order restricting renewable energy permits on federal lands unless they match fossil fuel energy output per acre, according to Heatmap News.
  • Under this order, the Interior Department must consider alternatives during reviews, focusing on energy capacity density.
  • The Trump administration's stance against renewable energy is clear, as it promotes coal and limits renewable sources based on government management of land.
  • Burgum's order highlights the ongoing governmental influence over national energy policy and its impact on renewable energy development.

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