On July 14, U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, Democrat from West Virginia, indicated that he would not support a reconciliation package with additional climate incentives, seemingly ending the uncertainty of much of the past year. The rumored clean energy package had recently been pegged at around $300 billion and included extensions of existing tax credits for wind and solar as well as potential credits for newer technologies, such as hydrogen, stand-alone energy storage, and support for existing nuclear plants. Incentives for domestic solar manufacturing and electric vehicles were also contemplated.