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Today’s Green Deals feature some hidden gems buried beneath all the bigger sales and events that are still happening through the approaching holiday. First, we have GoTrax’s Z4 PRO Foldable e-bike hitting a new $799 low, as well as a one-day-only sale on the brand’s XR PRO Commuting Electric Scooter at a new $330 low. We also have some solid savings on popular tools, like the EGO Power+ 56V 21-inch cordless dual-port self-propelled mower at its $623 2024 low alongside Husqvarna’s 330iKE Combi Switch lawn edger bundle hitting a new $240 low. Plus, all the other hangover Green Deals are in the links at the bottom of the page, including last week’s best savings across various categories of eco-friendly gear, which you can find in our Electrified Weekly roundup coverage.

Head below for other New Green Deals we’ve found today and, of course, Electrek’s best EV buying and leasing deals. Also, check out the new Electrek Tesla Shop for the best deals on Tesla accessories.

GoTrax’s class 3 Z4 PRO foldable e-bike provides 50 miles of travel at new $799 low

Best Buy is offering the best rate yet on the GoTrax Z4 PRO Foldable e-bike for $799 shipped. Normally fetching $1,300 since the tariffs from June raised the price from $1,100, we saw very few discounts over the year, mostly to $1,000. While we did see it go as low as $860, that price is getting beaten out here today with a $501 price cut that lands it at a new all-time low. You won’t find this model at Amazon or direct from GoTrax either, with Best Buy being the primary retailer to offer it. Don’t worry though, replacement parts aren’t hard to come by should anything ever go awry.

The GoTrax Z4 PRO e-bike makes a great affordable means to solve commuting concerns, with its 28 MPH top speed and 50-mile travel range thanks to the 500W rear-hub motor and the removable 48V battery. Built to “go where other e-bikes can’t…even when you aren’t riding,” the primary draw of this model is its foldable frame, which makes saving storage space far easier when it is not in use. It also features off-road fat tires, a front wheel suspension, fenders on both wheels, a rear storage rack, and a display that gives you real-time data like speed, distance traveled, battery levels, and so on.

EGO Power+ dual-port mower

Tackle more ground with the EGO Power+ 56V 21-inch cordless dual-port self-propelled mower at $623 2024 low

Amazon is offering the EGO Power+ 56V 21-inch Cordless Electric Dual-Port Self Propelled Lawn Mower with two 5.0Ah batteries for $623.22 shipped. You’d normally be pressed for $799 for this model and battery package at full price, with discounts here mostly keeping costs above $699, though we did see it go as low as $639 recently during Cyber Monday. Today, you’re looking at a solid 22% markdown that saves you $176 and gives you the chance to add it to your arsenal at the best price we’ve seen in over a year – sitting just $24 above the all-time low from 2020.

Built for more power to last longer, this self-propelled cordless lawn mower from EGO Power+ combines the brand’s brushless motor design with an expanded two-port PeakPower system that lets you use the two 5.0Ah batteries simultaneously for up to 80 minutes of runtime. Crowned with LED headlights for visibility no matter what time you’re tackling yard duties, it delivers a 6-position cutting height adjustment that ranges from 1.5 inches to 4 inches. There’s also a variable speed control for the mower’s mobility up to 3.1 MPH, as well as a 3-in-1 functionality for rear bagging, side discharges, or mulching.

Husqvarna Combi Switch

Add versatility to your arsenal with Husqvarna’s 330iKE Combi Switch lawn edger bundle at new $240 low

We just spotted the best deal yet on Husqvarna’s 330iKE Combi Switch and Lawn Edger Attachment with an included battery and charger for $239.80 shipped at Amazon. Down from its usual $420 price tag, which it regularly keeps to, this package has seen few discounts over the year, the biggest of them being a fall to $277 back in September. You can grab it here today at $180 off its going rate, giving you a new versatile upgrade for lawn duties at the lowest price we have tracked.

The 330iKE bundle from Husqvarna is a great way to start investing in the brand’s Combi Switch systems, which allows for the edge attachment to be switched out with over 14 others in seconds, cutting down on the space taken up by one-job tools. The edger attachment sports an 8-inch steel cutting blade that provides a 2.5-inch cutting depth, along with a 6-inch adjustable wheel for smooth operations to keep your lines on a straight and narrow path. There are no cords here to worry about either, with the Combi Switch motor ready to take any other Husqvarna batteries you’ve invested in for longer runtimes too.

More Husqvarna Combi Switch tool deals:

GoTrax Z4 PRO e-bike

Get 19 miles of commuting support on GoTrax’s XR PRO electric scooter at new $330 low

Coming to us through its 25 Days of Deals, Best Buy is giving commuters the best deal we’ve seen on the GoTrax XR PRO Commuting Electric Scooter for $329.99 shipped through the rest of the day. Usually going for $550 these days, we saw it hit the former $350 low back in September, while more recent discounts have kept costs well above this rate since. For the rest of the day you can add it to your commute at a 40% markdown that saves you $220 while beating out its former low by $20.

GoTrax’s XR PRO e-scooter is an excellent option for commuters needing more convenience and independence during their travels to school, work, and so on. The 300W motor here (peaking at 400W) works alongside the 36V battery to deliver top 15.5 MPH speeds for up to 19 miles of travel on one full charge. The simple hook-n-latch system allows for one-touch folding when you’ve reached your destination, making it easy to store (and charge) while not in use. It has an integrated digital display that gives you control over the scooter’s settings, a bright LED headlight for those late-night commutes and joyrides, with 8.5-inch pneumatic, pre-slimed tires that help you to avoid flats, pops, and tears.

Best ongoing holiday e-bike deals!

Best new Green Deals landing this week

The savings this week are also continuing to a collection of other markdowns. To the same tune as the offers above, these all help you take a more energy-conscious approach to your routine. Winter means you can lock in even better off-season price cuts on electric tools for the lawn while saving on EVs and tons of other gear.

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Kia built an electric van for wheelchair users: Check out the new PV5 WAV

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Kia built an electric van for wheelchair users: Check out the new PV5 WAV

Kia’s first electric van is proving to be even more functional. The new PV5 WAV is specifically designed to be affordable, accessible, and wheelchair-friendly. Meet the new Kia PV5 WAV.

Meet the Kia PV5 WAV electric van

The PV5 is a fully electric midsize van. It’s the first of many from Kia’s new Platform Beyond Vehicle (PBV) business.

Kia promised its PBVs would go “Beyond Mobility,” and the company is proving it. On Tuesday, Kia unveiled the new PV5 WAV, calling it “a new era for wheelchair accessible electric vehicles.”

The PV5 is the perfect electric van for the task. Based on its new E-GMP.S EV platform, it has a flat floor design and extended wheelbase, unlocking more interior space.

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Kia designed the electric van not only for wheelchair users but also for their families, caregivers, and drivers. The PV5 WAV features a custom side-entry system to make it easier to get in and out of. An adjustable third-row seat enables users to assist from the side.

It will also feature a specially developed wheelchair belt fastener and entry ramp that can handle up to 661 lbs (300 kg).

According to Kia, the PV5 will include all necessary equipment for individuals with disabilities, based on the AAOS open software platform.

Kia-PV5-WAV-EV-van
Kia PV5 WAV electric van interior (Source: Kia)

The new electric van variant will be built alongside other PV5 models at Kia’s Hwaseong EVO Plant in Korea. Kia opened PV5 Passenger pre-orders (shown below) in the UK on May 1, starting at £32,995, or about $44,000. It will launch in Europe and Korea later this year, followed by other global markets in 2026.

Kia’s Passenger electric van is offered with two battery options: 51.5 kWh or 71.2 kWh, good for up to 179 miles or 249 miles of WLTP driving range.

After partnering with Motability Operations in February, Kia said, “users receiving a disability allowance can choose an affordable and accessible vehicle.”

The PV5 WAV will initially launch in the UK, but Kia plans to expand sales to other global regions. A larger PV7 van will arrive in 2027, followed by the PV9 in 2029. Kia will continue launching new electric variants and use cases. By 2030, the company aims to sell 250,000 electric vans as it taps into a new market.

Last month, at the 2025 Seoul Mobility Show, Kia and LG Electronics unveiled two new “Speilraum” PV5 electric van concepts for camping and other fun uses. What’s next?

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GOP proposes sending US EV jobs to China, giving money to elites instead

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GOP proposes sending US EV jobs to China, giving money to elites instead

US republicans have unveiled their new tax proposal, which kills a slew of tax credits to help working families become more energy efficient, improve US air quality, and boost US manufacturing. The republican proposal instead channels that money to wealthy elites, increasing the deficit by trillions of dollars along the way.

Republicans in Congress released their 389-page proposal today and, as expected, it includes several provisions to eliminate popular clean energy credits which were driving a boost in American manufacturing.

The credits were largely established under President Biden as part of the Inflation Reduction Act, which raised hundreds of billions of dollars through tax enforcement on wealthy individuals and corporations and channeled that into energy efficiency credits for American families.

We’ve covered how families could save thousands of dollars on upgrades to lower their energy costs through these credits.

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But these credits aren’t just money-saving for Americans, they also work to boost American manufacturing.

Due to various provisions in the bill, particularly around the $7,500 EV tax credit which was limited to cars that undergo final assembly in North America. While loopholes exist, nevertheless the bill resulted in a massive expansion of American manufacturing, driving hundreds of billions of dollars of investment and creating hundreds of thousands of jobs.

But now, republicans in Congress are trying to roll much of that progress back.

Here’s a life of the bill’s various effects (via the BlueGreen Alliance):

  • Attaching restrictions to clean energy and manufacturing tax credits that would make them unusable in practical terms while also “sunsetting” those tax credits early, a move that research suggests will increase costs for American families; 
  • Repealing the Clean Vehicle Tax Credits; 
  • Repealing the Clean Hydrogen Tax Credit; 
  • Clawing back unspent funds for air quality monitoring in schools, clean manufacturing, state and community energy programs, and electric grid upgrades; 
  • Defunding and delaying the Methane Emissions Reduction Program (MERP), which reduces pollution and protects the health of workers and communities; 
  • Clawing back all unspent Inflation Reduction Act funds, including many provisions that would have lowered energy bills, created jobs, and reduced pollution; and 
  • Attacks on many additional Inflation Reduction Act programs and initiatives.   

You can perhaps see a pattern in these effects: they’re primarily targeted towards increasing costs for regular American families who were taking advantage of these tax credits, and towards programs that would keep you and your children healthier.

Previous analyses show how repealing these tax credits would lead to increased electricity prices for all Americans.

It should not be any surprise to anyone that has been paying attention that republicans want to poison you and raise your costs, but some people apparently still need more examples, so here we are.

In particular, the new tax proposal eliminates the US EV tax credit which had driven so much of that investment due to its domestic manufacturing provision (though there are some small carveouts). Not only does that inflate the cost of the best vehicles available today for Americans, it also takes away one of the incentives that was driving investment in US manufacturing.

We’ve warned before that a bill like this would just send more EV jobs to China, a country where nobody is “debating” over which direction the auto industry is going. Chinese automakers all know the industry is going electric, and they’re putting all of their effort into it.

This is quite a contrast with Western automakers which keep hemming and hawing, begging their governments to let them go bankrupt with anti-EV policy decisions that will only slow down their transition towards modernizing to the global EV status quo.

We’ve already seen the effects of other poor policy decisions on manufacturing, with several companies pausing or canceling plans to build manufacturing facilities in North America as a result of tariff chaos at the hands of an ignoramus. Republican districts have been hit hardest, as they were where the majority of this investment had been going.

And we’ve seen it made clear that the republicans in government responsible for protecting clean air would rather poison you and raise your fuel costs, as long as it helps the oil industry which bribed them into their position.

But then, the cherry on top of today’s tax proposal is that its cuts of these credits don’t even have a greater budgetary purpose. Not only was the Inflation Reduction Act revenue-positive – which is to say, it raised more money than it spent, thus reducing the deficit – today’s republican tax bill is revenue-negative, which is to say, it will increase the deficit.

The republican proposal raises the debt ceiling by $4 trillion, and it makes use of virtually all of that headroom, as the Joint Committee on Taxation has estimated that it will add $3.7 trillion to US debt. This is largely due to the bill’s significant giveaways to wealthy elites, with the majority of tax cuts targeted at the wealthiest households.

So the government isn’t even getting any savings out of this bill, merely channeling more money from working families to the wealthy elites that the republican party has always tried to benefit (including in other ways than the clean energy credits, like by cutting health care for the poor).

If you have a republican representative, all it takes is 3 republican Congresspeople to oppose this job-killing bill and to stand up for the well-being of their constituents.

Solar industry analysts have identified four republican Congresspeople who might be swayed in this respect, with their contact info below (Find out more about how this will affect the solar tax credit in this article by Electrek’s Michelle Lewis)

But there are many others whose districts have received significant investment, with EV projects being particularly popular in states like Georgia, North Carolina, and others along the burgeoning US “battery belt”. An interactive tool, including the ability to sort by congressional district, is available here.

Otherwise, you can find your representative on Congress’ website, and then search for the contact form on your representative’s website to get in contact with them.

Of course, if you have a Democratic representative, it’s also worth letting them know that you oppose the tax bill, just in case a few of them decide to jump ranks and join the republicans in harming America. We certainly hope they don’t, but it could happen.


Among the proposed cuts is the rooftop solar credit. That means you could have only until the end of this year to install rooftop solar on your home, before republicans raise the cost of doing so by an average of ~$10,000. So if you want to go solar, get started now.

To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them.

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here. – ad*

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The House draft budget kills the 30% residential solar tax credit

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The House draft budget kills the 30% residential solar tax credit

The House’s “One, Big, Beautiful Bill” (yes, it’s really called that) has set an accelerated expiration date of December 31, 2025, for the 30% residential solar tax credit – nearly a decade ahead of its originally planned end date.

Is this the end of the residential solar tax credit?

The point of this giant bill is to extend the expiring Trump-era tax cuts from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which would cost around $4 trillion over the next decade.

The Republican-majority House Ways and Means Committee proposes terminating section 25D on page 221, which would kill residential solar tax credits at the end of this year, almost a decade ahead of its original end date of December 31, 2034.

(Utility-scale solar’s tax credits remain in place through 2028 before a phase-down to 80% in 2029, 60% in 2030, 40% in 2031, and zero in 2032. That’s earlier than what’s currently law.)

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The original plan included a gradual reduction in residential solar tax credits; this new compressed timeframe leaves no time for the solar industry to prepare. “If Congress eliminates the ITC without a reasonable phase-down, that’s obviously going to cause immediate disruption within the solar industry,” Aaron Nichols with Exact Solar told EnergySage. 

The tax credit is known as the Investment Tax Credit (ITC), and it provides homeowners with a tax credit of 30% of the full cost of their residential solar installation. It was part of the Biden administration’s flagship Inflation Reduction Act.

The House Ways and Means Committee will mark up and then vote on the bill today, and then it will be sent to the entire House of Representatives. It will then be sent to the Senate, which has until July 4 to amend, reject, or pass the bill. 

The bill also proposes that the EV and energy efficiency tax credits be killed.

Electrek’s Take

It’s not hyperbole to say that this would be one of the worst decisions the Republican Party would ever make for the US economy. Nothing about this makes America great.

That’s why Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) released a statement yesterday saying that “at a time when billions of dollars are being invested in states that overwhelmingly voted for President Trump, this proposed legislation will effectively dismantle the most successful industrial onshoring effort in US history.”

And Charlie Hadlow, president and COO of EnergySage, told Electrek that “eliminating the 25D tax credit would be a step backward for American families and small businesses. President Trump has emphasized the need for more domestic energy sources, not fewer, and this credit plays a key role in expanding access to reliable, affordable, homegrown power.”

If this reckless proposal to kill the 30% residential solar tax credit passes, it’s going to raise homeowners’ energy bills, kill jobs, kneecap the solar industry, and hurt small businesses. It will be more of an uphill battle to create a more resilient grid as energy demand skyrockets. It’s going to be much more difficult to compete with China. It makes it harder to reduce emissions (not that Trump’s party cares about that).

Nothing about this budget proposal makes sense. And the thing that makes the least sense is that most of the pain will be felt in red states, where most of the solar industry’s growth is happening.

So, will some Republican lawmakers have the guts to stand up for their constituents? I guess we’ll find out.

Read more: Home solar prices just hit record lows – and storage is even cheaper


If you live in an area that has frequent natural disaster events, and are interested in making your home more resilient to power outages, consider going solar and adding a battery storage system. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. They have hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them.

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisers to help you every step of the way. Get started here. –trusted affiliate link*

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