First Solar is a publicly traded company in the Energy sector. This company's operations and valuation are directly affected by Congressional energy policy, including renewable energy credits, fossil fuel regulations, and grid infrastructure spending. HillSignal is tracking 7 active Congressional signals mentioning First Solar, including 7 bills. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
AI-detected clusters of bills sharing policy language across their analyses. Concepts are literal phrases present in every member's AI text — not generated narratives.
The SHINE Act of 2026, introduced January 8, 2026, and referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee, directs the Secretary of Energy to develop a voluntary streamlined permitting process for residential distributed energy systems (solar, wind, battery storage, EV chargers). This is an early-stage bill with no appropriated funding, but it targets the largest barrier to residential solar adoption: soft costs. Residential solar pure-plays Enphase and SolarEdge are the primary beneficiaries.
HR4690 repeals the FY2030 federal building fossil fuel phase-out, removing a mandatory procurement stream for solar and electrification companies while preserving demand for traditional gas-fired equipment. The bill has passed committee on a party-line vote (27-21) and faces an uncertain floor schedule. Near-term market impact is moderate — the direct federal building market is small, but the policy signal is negative for rooftop solar pure-plays and positive for gas equipment suppliers like GE Vernova.
The Senate defeated S.J.Res.107 (47-53) which sought to disapprove IRS Notice 2025-42 that would have terminated clean electricity tax credits for wind and solar. The rule remains in effect, preserving the 30% Investment Tax Credit and Production Tax Credit for projects starting construction before 2033. This removes near-term regulatory risk for the tax equity market supporting utility-scale and distributed solar and wind development. The vote failed on party lines, with Democrats blocking the disapproval, indicating partisan division continues but the current policy status quo protects the sector through 2027.
HR6474 expands renewable energy tax credit eligibility to non-metropolitan statistical areas, adding a 10% bonus credit for wind, solar, and clean electricity projects in rural America. The bill is early-stage (referred to Ways and Means, December 2025) with no appropriations; it modifies existing tax credit statutes. Real market data shows NEE near 52-week highs ($96.47) with positive momentum, FSLR flat near $195.50, and ENPH under pressure at $32.57, indicating that broader interest rate concerns currently outweigh incremental rural tax credit policy.
The PRICE Act (HR6983) is an early-stage, single-sponsor bill requiring large data centers to generate all on-site power from clean sources by 2040. It is stuck in committee with one cosponsor and no authorized funding, giving it near-zero probability of passage in its current form. Data center REITs EQIX and DLR face theoretical long-term cost headwinds, while solar manufacturer FSLR sees incremental demand potential, but no market impact is imminent.
The DATA Act of 2026 (S.3585) creates a new legal entity — the consumer-regulated electric utility (CREU) — exempt from federal regulation if physically islanded from the grid. This mandates on-site solar generation and battery storage for every eligible customer, directly benefiting decentralized energy equipment makers Enphase ($ENPH), SolarEdge ($SEDG), and First Solar ($FSLR). The bill is in early stages (referred to committee, January 2026) with no funding attached; it is a regulatory restructuring, not a spending bill. Recent price action shows ENPH down 14.1% and SEDG down 18.5% over 30 days, while FSLR is roughly flat (-1.06%), indicating the market has NOT priced in this legislative catalyst.
HR 1982 (Return to Sender Act) would repeal unobligated clean energy funding from the Inflation Reduction Act, but the bill is early-stage with no Senate companion progress and faces a steep uphill path to enactment. Real market data shows ENPH down -13.46% over 30 days reflecting structural headwinds, while PLUG is up +35.84%, indicating the market has not priced in passage risk.