As the CEOs of the National Urban League (NUL) and the American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE), we are writing to express our appreciation for your commitment to an equitable energy transition and to a 21st-century grid that is reliable, affordable, and sustainable.
Greg Wetstone
Emeritus Board Member
Former President and Chief Executive Officer, American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE)
Gregory Wetstone is the former President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE). He served from January of 2016 to November of 2023, and produced dramatic improvements in ACORE’s organizational health, prominence and effectiveness in pursuit of its mission. Greg oversaw ACORE’s strategic planning and core activities, including government affairs, communications, research and analysis, executive programs, market expansion priorities, signature events and fundraising.
Prior to joining ACORE, Greg served as Vice President for Terra-Gen Power LLC, a renewable energy company with utility-scale wind, solar and geothermal energy facilities. Prior to his six-year term with Terra-Gen, he served as Senior Director for Government and Public Affairs at the American Wind Energy Association and Director of Programs at the Natural Resources Defense Council, where he founded the legislative program. Earlier in his career, Greg was Senior Counsel to the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and played an important role in crafting a number of important laws, including the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments. Prior to joining the Committee staff, Greg was Director of the Air and Water Pollution Program at the Environmental Law Institute. Greg is a forceful advocate for the policies and financial structures essential to renewable energy growth, and has been widely published and quoted on energy and environmental issues over the span of his career. He has a Juris Doctor degree from the Duke University School of Law and a bachelor’s degree in biology from Florida State University.
Featured Work
Celebrating One Year of Progress: The Inflation Reduction Act’s Impact on Renewable Energy and the American Economy
Celebrating the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)’s anniversary, we reflect on the law’s transformative benefits and ACORE’s role in its enactment.
ACORE Letter on Pending Energy Legislation in Texas
- Grid Infrastructure
- Project Finance
- Letters
The Texas legislature is currently considering legislation that, if implemented, would create impediments to energy infrastructure development.
Testimony of Gregory Wetstone before the U.S. House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis
ACORE’s Greg Wetstone provided testimony to the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on the Climate Crisis.
A moment of hope on climate: Now what?
With the enactment of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), our nation is now finally positioned to achieve its climate targets. Thanks to the IRA, clean energy businesses will benefit from stable, long-term tax incentives like those enjoyed by the fossil fuel sector for more than a century. Tax credits for renewable generation are complemented by new incentives for energy storage, clean hydrogen and domestic clean energy manufacturing.
ACORE Comments on Department of Commerce Proposed Rule on Duty-Free Importation of Solar Cells and Modules from Southeast Asia
- Supply Chain & Trade
- Comments & Testimony
ACORE submitted comments to the Department of Commerce about the proposed rule on duty-free importation of solar cells and modules from Southeast Asia.
‘Misinterpreted’ data: It’s time to end Commerce solar tariff inquiry
- Supply Chain & Trade
- Opinion Placements
Launched in late March, the Commerce Department’s solar tariff inquiry has been controversial from the beginning. Commerce initiated the process in response to a petition from a California solar company that had little to offer in the way of substantiation for its claim.
ACORE Comments on Department of Commerce Solar Inquiry
- Project Finance
- Supply Chain & Trade
- Comments & Testimony
ACORE submitted comments on the Department of Commerce’s solar circumvention inquiry.
Commerce Department puts solar industry on ice
- Supply Chain & Trade
- Opinion Placements
The U.N. secretary-general recently warned that the world is “sleepwalking into a climate catastrophe.” So it is a tragic irony that the most immediate and sweeping threat to President Joe Biden’s clean energy and climate agenda comes not from the recent push for more fossil fuel development or the intransigence of climate deniers, but from a little-noticed but devastating decision at the Biden administration’s Commerce Department that is bringing America’s booming solar growth to a screeching halt.
Excerpts of Remarks as Prepared for Delivery – ACORE 20th Anniversary Gala
Excerpts of Remarks as Prepared for Delivery – ACORE 20th Anniversary Gala