Group of House Republicans also wants changes Senators aren't only hearing from industry leaders, they're also hearing from Republicans in the House. "We had some good conversations with a handful of senators and have been having ongoing conversations," said Rep. Rob Bresnahan, R-Pa., who wants to see the Senate make adjustments to the House bill he voted for. "The energy credits are very big for northeastern Pennsylvania," he told NPR. "I'm OK with the phase out, but giving enough runway for projects that have already been committed and pledged to be completed before having the rug ripped out from essentially underneath them." Bresnahan is one of 13 Republican House members who sent a last week to Senate leadership, urging the chamber to "substantially and strategically improve our clean energy tax credit provisions" from the House-passed bill. The group lists concerns about restrictions of transferability of some credits, the 60-day time limit for enacting projects and other issues. "This approach jeopardizes ongoing development, discourages long-term investment, and could significantly delay or cancel energy infrastructure projects across the country," the letter reads. "Without a clear signal from Congress encouraging continued investments and offering business certainty as these provisions are phased out, project cancellations will continue to snowball." Senate Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said he's optimistic that progress is being made among his GOP colleagues. "What I'm doing is going literally senator by senator to those who support innovation or are concerned about not jacking up prices and understand that clean energy helps to create more competition and choice, which is a kind of Republican idea," Wyden told NPR. But changes passed in the Senate would require approval in the House, and any major adjustments could jeopardize the delicate balance of support that allowed GOP leaders to force the bill through last month. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has repeatedly warned senators to tread lightly when it comes to changes in the bill. , Key tax incentives for US wind and solar projects would face a more aggressive phase-out in the Senate’s latest version of President Donald Trump’s spending package., Senate Republicans make steep cuts to wind and solar in updated megabill text The changes came after President Donald Trump urged Senate Majority Leader John Thune to crack down on the credits..